Adrian Fontes
Adrian Fontes is an American attorney, United States Marine Corps veteran, and Democratic politician serving as the 21st Secretary of State of Arizona since January 2023.[1][2] A native of Arizona, he previously held the elected position of Maricopa County Recorder from 2017 to 2023, administering elections, voter registration, and ballot processing for the second-largest voting jurisdiction in the United States, which encompasses over 2.5 million registered voters.[1][2][3] Before entering elected office, Fontes worked as a prosecutor in Denver and Maricopa County after graduating from law school, and he served on active duty in the Marine Corps from 1992 to 1996.[4][5] As Secretary of State, he oversees Arizona's statewide elections and has emphasized technological enhancements to voting processes, while facing legal challenges and public scrutiny related to election administration in a politically contested environment.[1][3]Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Adrian Fontes was born on April 3, 1970, in Nogales, Arizona, a border city in Santa Cruz County, where he was raised in the Villa Coronado neighborhood.[6] His family has deep roots in the region, with his father's side present in Nogales since the 1690s and his mother's Grimm and Puchi families also maintaining a longstanding local presence.[6] Fontes comes from a Mexican-American lineage tracing back to the 17th century, with a great-grandfather recognized as the first electrician in the Santa Cruz Valley.[7] His father, Victor Fontes, worked as a civil engineer and contributed to the construction of Interstate 19 between Tucson and Nogales, while his mother served as a teacher.[7] Fontes' paternal grandfather, Florentino Díaz "Tino" Fontes, immigrated from Mexico, became a U.S. citizen after serving in World War II alongside four brothers, and later held roles as Nogales' mayor and a courthouse custodian for 17 years; Tino supported his six children through college by taking multiple jobs.[6][8] His paternal grandmother, Lillian Grimm Puchi, worked as a clerk at the Historic 1904 Courthouse in Nogales.[6] Fontes' upbringing in Nogales emphasized values of hard work, perseverance, and public service, influenced by family ties to local institutions and leadership exemplified by his grandfather's civic roles.[6][9] He attended local schools, including A.J. Mitchell Elementary, Wade Carpenter Middle School, and Nogales High School, graduating in 1988, amid a community environment shaped by the border region's dynamics.[6]Academic and early professional training
Fontes earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Arizona State University in Tempe.[2] He subsequently attended the Sturm College of Law at the University of Denver, graduating with a Juris Doctor in 2000 and concentrating in international law and legal studies.[2][10][11] Upon completing law school, Fontes commenced his legal career as a deputy district attorney in the Denver District Attorney's office.[4] He later transitioned to the Maricopa County Attorney's office in Arizona, where he prosecuted felony cases, including those related to child abuse, sexual assault, and domestic violence.[4] Fontes maintained a private legal practice alongside his prosecutorial roles, accumulating approximately 15 years of experience in law before pursuing elected office in 2016.[3]Military service
United States Marine Corps enlistment and service
Adrian Fontes enlisted in the United States Marine Corps, inspired by his grandfather's military service.[8] He served on active duty from 1992 to 1996.[1][2] During this period, Fontes earned a nomination for a meritorious commission.[1][5] Fontes is recognized as an honorable veteran of the Marine Corps.[1] Specific details regarding his rank, unit assignments, or operational deployments during his service are not publicly detailed in available records.[1][4] His military experience has been cited in his public service biography as foundational to his commitment to public duty.[12]Pre-elective career
Legal practice and civic involvement
Following his admission to the bar, Fontes began his legal career as a prosecutor in the Denver District Attorney's Office.[4] He subsequently returned to Arizona and continued prosecutorial work at the Maricopa County Attorney's Office.[4] Later, Fontes led the International Prosecution Unit within the Arizona Attorney General's Office, handling cases involving cross-border criminal activities.[3] [13] These roles emphasized public sector litigation focused on criminal justice, with no documented private practice or affiliation with a specific law firm during this period.[14] Fontes maintained a legal practice spanning 15 years prior to his 2016 election bid, primarily in prosecutorial capacities across these government offices.[3] His work centered on enforcing laws against serious offenses, including those with international dimensions, reflecting a commitment to public accountability rather than civil or corporate representation.[1] Documented civic involvement before elective office appears limited to his prosecutorial public service, which involved advocating for justice in underserved or complex cases, such as supporting disadvantaged communities through legal enforcement.[1] No records indicate participation in non-governmental boards, volunteer organizations, or community advocacy groups predating his candidacy.Initial forays into public administration
Fontes entered public service as a prosecutor in the Denver District Attorney's office following his graduation from law school.[1] He subsequently worked in the Maricopa County Attorney's office, handling prosecutorial duties within Arizona's largest county jurisdiction.[1] Later, he led the International Prosecution Unit at the Arizona Attorney General's office, focusing on cross-border legal cases and coordination with federal authorities on matters such as human trafficking and drug enforcement.[1] [12] These positions, spanning approximately 15 years of legal practice prior to his 2016 electoral bid, immersed Fontes in the administrative functions of government agencies, including case management, policy implementation in criminal justice, and inter-agency collaboration.[1] His prosecutorial roles emphasized enforcement of state laws, victim advocacy, and resource allocation within constrained public budgets, providing foundational experience in bureaucratic oversight and public accountability.[12] Though primarily legal in nature, these government employments represented his early involvement in public administration, distinct from private practice, by directly serving state and local executive branches.[1] During this period, Fontes also engaged in civic activities aligned with public service, drawing inspiration from his grandfather's tenure as mayor of Nogales, Arizona, though specific appointments to boards or commissions remain undocumented in primary records.[8] His work in these offices honed skills in regulatory compliance and administrative efficiency, which he later applied to electoral administration.[1]Maricopa County Recorder (2017–2021)
Path to office and initial elections
Adrian Fontes, a Democrat and former Marine Corps veteran with a background in law, announced his candidacy for Maricopa County Recorder in early 2016, motivated by widespread dissatisfaction with incumbent Republican Helen Purcell's handling of the county's August 2016 primary election, which featured insufficient polling locations, lengthy voter lines exceeding four hours in some areas, and technical failures with ballot printers that forced thousands to cast provisional ballots.[15] Fontes, a political novice, positioned his campaign on promises to modernize election processes, expand early voting access, and restore public trust in Maricopa County's administration of elections for its over 2.5 million registered voters—the second-largest jurisdiction in the U.S. He faced no significant opposition in the Democratic primary held on August 30, 2016, securing the nomination automatically.[16][17] In the November 8, 2016, general election, Fontes defeated Purcell, who had held the office since 1989 across seven terms, by capturing approximately 51.8% of the vote to Purcell's 48.2%, a margin of about 13,000 votes amid ongoing provisional ballot counts.[18][19] Purcell conceded on November 14, 2016, after trailing consistently, marking Fontes as the first Latino elected to a countywide office in Maricopa County history.[18][20][17]Key administrative actions during tenure
Upon assuming office in January 2017, Fontes prioritized election security by establishing an in-house Election Information Security Officer position, the first of its kind among local jurisdictions nationwide.[21] His office implemented mandatory IT security training for staff, including phishing prevention protocols, and coordinated with federal and state entities such as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FBI, U.S. Postal Service, and the Arizona Counter Terrorism Information Center to safeguard the voter database.[21] Additionally, the office conducted regular "Dark Web" threat assessments, hardened the county website through vulnerability analyses and firewall installations, and shared intelligence with higher-level agencies.[21] Fontes oversaw significant expansions in voter services, resulting in an increase of approximately 500,000 registered voters during his tenure, bringing Maricopa County's total to 2,595,272 by late 2020.[21] [22] In 2019, his office negotiated a division of election duties with the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, assigning the Recorder's office primary responsibility for early voting administration while the Board handled election-day operations.[23] This included approving an enhanced early voting plan that December, which incorporated hiring additional voter registration clerks at polling locations to improve accessibility.[24] Infrastructure upgrades under Fontes included replacing outdated voting machines and introducing bipartisan review processes for overvotes to ensure accuracy.[22] The office digitized ballot processing, preserving photographic records upon casting, and constructed a secure ballot vault with restricted access, 24/7 law enforcement monitoring, and severed external telephone and modem lines to the central server, limiting access to three authorized staff members.[21] These measures, implemented in a bipartisan framework, aimed to bolster both physical and digital protections for election materials.[22]2020 election oversight and immediate aftermath
As Maricopa County Recorder, Adrian Fontes oversaw the administration of the November 3, 2020, general election in the county, which encompassed over 4.3 million registered voters and processed more than 2.6 million ballots amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] His office expanded mail-in voting options under Arizona's no-excuse absentee law, distributing ballots to approximately 1.9 million voters while maintaining in-person voting sites with enhanced safety protocols such as additional drop boxes and social distancing measures.[21] Fontes emphasized equipment testing and logic-and-accuracy checks prior to Election Day, certifying the county's tabulation systems as compliant with state standards.[25] On Election Day, Fontes' office encountered operational challenges, including tabulator malfunctions at roughly 20% of polling locations—primarily in high-turnout, Republican-leaning areas—leading to delays of up to several hours as paper ballots were duplicated or hand-fed into functioning machines.[26] These issues stemmed from high voter volume overwhelming some older equipment, but Fontes reported that all affected ballots were ultimately counted without loss, attributing resolutions to bipartisan poll workers and rapid technician responses.[27] Voter turnout reached a record 80.2% in Maricopa County, with unofficial results showing Joe Biden receiving 1,040,774 votes (50.0%) to Donald Trump's 1,025,010 (49.3%), contributing to Arizona's narrow statewide margin for Biden of 10,457 votes.[28] A prominent immediate controversy, dubbed "Sharpiegate," emerged on November 5, 2020, when social media claims alleged that Sharpie markers—provided by poll workers and recommended by the county for their quick-drying ink to minimize smudging—caused ballots to bleed through or be rejected by tabulators.[29] Fontes dismissed these assertions as unfounded "hoo hah," explaining that Sharpies had been tested and approved for use, with bleed-through occurring only on ballot backs (not affecting optical scans) and any unreadable marks duplicated by hand under bipartisan observation per county procedures.[27] [26] A lawsuit filed that day by a voter claiming Sharpie invalidation was expedited but dismissed on November 20, 2020, with the judge ruling no evidence of systematic disenfranchisement.[30] [31] In the certification process, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, incorporating data from Fontes' office, canvassed and certified the results on November 17, 2020, affirming the integrity of the count despite ongoing fraud allegations from Trump supporters.[21] Fontes publicly maintained there was no evidence of widespread irregularities, citing multiple audits, hand recounts of batches, and federal observers' approvals, while multiple post-election lawsuits challenging the process in Maricopa were dismissed for lack of proof.[21] [32] These events preceded Fontes' defeat in the November 2020 election for re-election as Recorder to Republican Stephen Richer.[33]Engagement with 2021 forensic audit
As Maricopa County Recorder until January 2021, Adrian Fontes had overseen the 2020 general election but left office before the Arizona State Senate initiated its forensic audit of county ballots and equipment in April 2021, following a subpoena to county officials. Fontes, as a former election administrator, publicly criticized the audit process led by Cyber Ninjas, a private firm with no prior election auditing experience, which had been selected without a competitive bidding process by Senate President Karen Fann. He described it as a "sham audit" that wasted taxpayer funds and eroded public confidence in elections without enhancing security.[21] Fontes argued the review unfairly impugned the integrity of election workers—thousands of Republicans, Democrats, Independents, and others—who had conducted a "clean, fair, and solid" process, as verified by the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors through expert consultations and due diligence. He highlighted security lapses, such as the unauthorized transfer of sensitive voter data to an unsecured site in Montana, as evidence of political motivations over genuine oversight. In congressional testimony on June 15, 2021, before the House Administration Subcommittee on Elections, Fontes linked the audit to heightened threats against officials, including armed protests at his former office and a bomb threat at his home, attributing these to unsubstantiated fraud narratives.[21][34] Following the September 24, 2021, release of Cyber Ninjas' report—which affirmed Joe Biden's margin of victory while identifying procedural issues like incomplete chain-of-custody documentation but no evidence of fraud sufficient to alter results—Fontes expressed relief at its conclusion but faulted it for failing to resolve key questions despite its investigative mandate. He noted that several recommendations, such as cross-checking voter rolls against the National Change of Address database and Social Security data, had already been implemented under his tenure to refine voter lists and reduce undeliverable ballots by 30,000 to 50,000 annually. Fontes maintained that the absence of fraud findings validated the original election's security, countering claims of systemic flaws.[35]Candidacy and election as Arizona Secretary of State
2022 campaign dynamics
Adrian Fontes secured the Democratic nomination for Arizona Secretary of State in the August 2, 2022, primary election, defeating state Representative Reginald Bolding with 66.1% of the vote to Bolding's 33.9%.[36] As the incumbent Maricopa County Recorder, Fontes leveraged his administrative experience and military background to consolidate support among Democrats, facing minimal intra-party challenge amid broader focus on the general election matchup.[37] In the general election, Fontes opposed Republican state Representative Mark Finchem, who had won his party's primary with 40.4% against Beau Lane and Shawnna Bolick.[38] The campaign centered on election integrity and administration, with Fontes emphasizing his track record overseeing Maricopa County's elections—including implementing security protocols post-2020—while portraying Finchem's proposals, such as phasing out vote tabulation machines in favor of hand-counted paper ballots, as disruptive to proven systems.[39] Finchem, endorsed by former President Donald Trump, countered by highlighting alleged vulnerabilities in Arizona's 2020 processes, advocating for enhanced chain-of-custody measures and voter ID expansions aligned with Proposition 309 on the ballot.[40] [41] The candidates clashed in a September 22, 2022, debate hosted by Arizona PBS, debating mail-in voting safeguards, early ballot processing, and the role of drop boxes, with Fontes defending decentralized county-led operations and Finchem calling for centralized state oversight to prevent irregularities.[42] [43] Fundraising underscored partisan divides, as national Democratic groups funneled resources to Fontes to oppose Finchem—categorized in reports as an election skeptic—while Finchem relied on conservative donors skeptical of 2020 outcomes; overall, non-candidate spending in such races exceeded traditional limits, with pro-Fontes efforts outpacing Finchem's amid broader anti-denialist campaigns.[44] [45] Polls indicated a tight contest, with Fontes holding a narrow lead by late October—typically 2-5 points in aggregates—reflecting Arizona's battleground status and voter polarization over election trust following 2020 litigation and audits.[46] The race attracted national scrutiny due to the office's authority over ballot certification and voting equipment, positioning it as a proxy for 2024 presidential election preparations, though mainstream coverage often framed dynamics through lenses of democratic defense versus reform advocacy.[47]Primary and general election outcomes
In the Democratic primary election for Arizona Secretary of State on August 2, 2022, Adrian Fontes defeated Reginald Bolding, receiving 302,681 votes (52.52%) to Bolding's 273,815 votes (47.48%).[48] The statewide canvass for the primary was certified on August 22, 2022.[48] Fontes advanced to the general election, where he faced Republican nominee Mark Finchem on November 8, 2022. Fontes won with 1,320,619 votes (52.39%) against Finchem's 1,200,411 votes (47.61%), a margin of approximately 120,208 votes or 4.78 percentage points.[49] The statewide canvass was certified on December 5, 2022, following county certifications and a partial recount in select races, though not required for this contest as the margin exceeded the 0.5% threshold.[49] Finchem's subsequent election contest challenge was dismissed by the Maricopa County Superior Court on December 22, 2022, upholding the results.[50]Arizona Secretary of State (2023–present)
Inauguration and early policy initiatives
Adrian Fontes was sworn into office as Arizona's 21st Secretary of State on January 2, 2023, in Phoenix.[51] During the inauguration ceremony, he delivered remarks emphasizing honor, integrity, and the protection of democracy, pledging to collaborate with Governor Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes to safeguard electoral processes.[51] In his initial address, Fontes outlined early priorities including public education on the roles and operations of election officials, enhanced safety measures for those officials amid rising threats, improved efficiency in the office's business services division—which handles corporate filings and commercial registrations—and preservation of state archives and libraries.[51] These commitments reflected his intent to address administrative bottlenecks inherited from prior administrations while focusing on operational transparency and security in election administration.[51] Throughout 2023, Fontes directed efforts toward updating the state's Elections Procedures Manual (EPM), a foundational document for standardizing county-level election practices, which had been stalled by partisan disputes in 2021.[52] The revised manual, submitted for approval on December 29, 2023, after incorporating input from county officials, tribes, and public comments, aimed to eliminate procedural ambiguities, bolster transparency, and ensure secure elections for the 2024 cycle, building on the 2019 version while adhering to statutory deadlines.[52] This initiative marked a key early focus on fortifying election infrastructure against potential disruptions, though it later faced legal challenges from Republican lawmakers questioning specific provisions.[52]2024 election administration and certification
As Arizona's Secretary of State, Adrian Fontes oversaw the administration of the 2024 primary and general elections, including voter registration verification, ballot distribution, and procedural updates to the state's Elections Procedures Manual. The July 30, 2024, primary election canvass was certified on August 15, 2024, with Fontes inviting public streaming of the process to promote transparency.[53] Leading into the November 5, 2024, general election, Fontes' office addressed a longstanding error in the voter registration database that potentially impacted the eligibility of approximately 98,000 to 100,000 voters, primarily in Maricopa County, who had registered using only a state ID number without submitting documentary proof of U.S. citizenship as required under Proposition 200.[54] [55] State officials, including Fontes' predecessor, had been aware of the database limitations since at least 2020, which stemmed from integration issues between the state system and federal databases, leading to partisan disputes over whether to purge affected voters or allow challenges.[54] Fontes opposed mass purges, arguing they risked disenfranchising eligible voters, while critics, including Republican lawmakers, pushed for stricter enforcement to verify citizenship.[55] Pre-election litigation influenced administration, including a September 2024 affirmation by Arizona authorities that counties could be compelled to certify results despite a federal court ruling questioning mandatory certification timelines under state law.[56] Fontes testified before Congress on September 11, 2024, defending Arizona's election safeguards, such as signature verification and chain-of-custody protocols for ballots, while emphasizing bipartisan cooperation among county recorders.[57] On Election Day, voting proceeded with early and mail-in ballots comprising a significant portion—over 80% in prior cycles—under rules requiring curing of mismatched signatures within five days post-election.[58] No widespread disruptions were reported, contrasting with prior elections marred by printer malfunctions and delays in Maricopa County. An appeals court ruling on November 5, 2024, upheld the release of names of about 218,000 potentially affected voters to a group seeking citizenship verification, which Fontes criticized as "shameless" but did not halt tabulation.[59] Counties completed their canvasses by mid-November 2024, culminating in the statewide canvass presented by Fontes on November 21, 2024.[60] The official certification of the November 5, 2024, general election results occurred on November 25, 2024, signed by Governor Katie Hobbs, Fontes, and other state officials, initiating a five-day window for challenges.[61] [62] This process unfolded without refusals to certify or significant legal obstructions from county officials, a departure from 2020 and 2022 cycles involving delayed or contested county actions.[63] [64] Fontes attributed the smooth certification to enhanced preparations and reduced partisan interference, though post-certification lawsuits continued over related procedural rules.[63]2025 developments in election procedures and litigation
In August 2025, Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes revised the state's Elections Procedures Manual (EPM) to incorporate court-ordered changes, retracting certain voter protection rules challenged by Republicans as exceeding statutory authority.[65] These revisions followed lawsuits alleging provisions in the prior draft overrode state law, such as expanded definitions of electioneering restrictions.[66] On September 16, 2025, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals blocked a provision in the EPM defining illegal voter intimidation broadly as activities around polling places "with the intent or effect of threatening, harassing, intimidating, or coercing voters," even beyond the 75-foot limit.[67] [68] The panel ruled the language unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, potentially chilling protected political speech by allowing poll workers to exclude individuals based solely on perceived effects.[67] On October 1, 2025, Fontes submitted the draft 2025 EPM—developed over nearly a year with input from bipartisan county officials and nearly 800 public comments—for review and approval by Governor Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes, as required under A.R.S. § 16-452.[69] The manual standardizes procedures for Arizona's 15 counties to ensure compliance with state and federal laws ahead of the 2026 elections.[69] In ongoing litigation over non-resident voting, an Arizona court in October 2025 denied Fontes' motion to dismiss a lawsuit by the Republican National Committee and Arizona GOP, confirming their standing to challenge the acceptance of Federal Write-in Absentee Ballots from individuals who have never resided in Arizona or the U.S.[70] The suit argues such voting violates the Arizona Constitution's residency requirement for electors.[70] On October 16, 2025, the Arizona Supreme Court unanimously upheld Fontes' authority in a separate challenge to the EPM process, ruling that the Administrative Procedures Act does not govern its adoption and affirming the statutory framework under A.R.S. § 16-452.[71] The decision dismissed Republican claims that legislative approval was needed for rule changes, preserving bipartisan precedents and enabling finalization of the 2025 EPM by year's end.[71] [72]Major controversies and criticisms
Allegations of election mismanagement in Maricopa County
In the August 28, 2018, Maricopa County primary election, overseen by Fontes as Recorder, voters experienced widespread issues including long lines and check-in equipment failures that delayed the opening of 62 polling places. An independent audit commissioned by the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors attributed these problems primarily to Fontes' office, citing inadequate training for poll workers on equipment setup and troubleshooting, absence of contingency plans for technician shortages or malfunctions, and poor communication protocols with supervisors. The audit recommended real-time equipment monitoring, enhanced staffing plans, and better line management procedures, while Fontes' office contested some findings, arguing that a contractor bore responsibility for equipment issues and that existing contingencies had functioned adequately.[73] Similar operational disruptions persisted into the November 2018 general election, with reports of persistent long lines, computer glitches, and voter access delays fueling public criticism of Fontes' administration. On November 19, 2018, protesters gathered outside the Maricopa County Recorder's office, demanding Fontes' resignation and accusing his office of incompetence and potential fraud, particularly regarding the preemptive establishment of emergency voting centers. Arizona Republican Party Chairman Jonathan Lines echoed claims of irregularities, though no evidence of illegal activity by Fontes was presented; Fontes defended the centers as routine legal measures used by multiple counties and parties to accommodate high turnout.[74] During the November 3, 2020, general election, which Fontes also administered as Recorder, Republican critics leveled the "Sharpiegate" allegation, claiming that Sharpie markers—provided and recommended by Maricopa County officials—caused ink to bleed through ballots, rendering votes unreadable by tabulation machines and potentially disenfranchising voters. A lawsuit filed by a self-identified voter on November 5, 2020, sought to invalidate affected ballots, but it was dismissed by a judge on November 20, 2020, after evidence showed the county's software de-duplicated bleed-through marks and that Sharpies dried within seconds without affecting readability. Fontes dismissed the claims as "hoo hah," affirming that ballots marked with Sharpies were fully countable, a position corroborated by independent fact-checkers who rated the allegations false based on testing and official protocols.[31][26][27] These incidents contributed to broader Republican assertions of systemic mismanagement under Fontes, including inadequate preparation for high-volume voting and overreliance on contractors, though subsequent reviews, including state and federal audits, identified operational shortcomings but no evidence of fraud altering outcomes. Fontes maintained that his office had improved processes from prior years, such as expanding early voting, and emphasized compliance with Arizona law amid unprecedented turnout.[73]Disputes over state election rules and transparency
Adrian Fontes, as Arizona Secretary of State, has overseen updates to the state's Elections Procedures Manual (EPM), a biennial document interpreting election statutes for county officials, which has sparked disputes with Republican legislators and conservative groups alleging insufficient transparency in its development process.[75] Critics, including House Speaker Steve Montenegro and Senate President Warren Petersen, argued in September 2025 that Fontes violated transparency requirements by not subjecting draft EPM changes to formal public comment periods under Arizona's Administrative Procedure Act, claiming this denied public input on rules affecting voter access and election security.[75] America First Legal supported these challenges in an amicus brief to the Arizona Supreme Court, describing Fontes' approach as an "illegal election rulemaking power grab" that circumvents statutory mandates for stakeholder involvement.[76] These contentions culminated in litigation, with the Arizona Supreme Court ruling on October 16, 2025, that the EPM's adoption does not constitute formal rulemaking requiring extensive public hearings or comment periods, affirming Fontes' authority to finalize the manual after internal review and limited stakeholder consultations.[71] The decision, which Fontes hailed for providing "long-awaited clarity" to election administrators preparing for 2026 cycles, rejected Republican demands for greater procedural hurdles, though Arizona GOP Chair Gina Swoboda indicated potential further appeals or legislative responses.[72] Prior to this, Fontes submitted the 2026 EPM draft to Governor Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes on October 1, 2025, despite threats of lawsuits from GOP figures who objected to provisions on ballot handling and voter verification without expanded public vetting.[77] Separate transparency concerns arose from specific EPM provisions, such as a broad definition of illegal voter intimidation that a federal appeals court in the Ninth Circuit blocked on September 16, 2025, in American Encore v. Fontes, deeming it overreach likely to chill protected speech near polling places without adequate justification under federal law.[68] In response to earlier Republican lawsuits, Fontes modified the EPM in August 2025, removing a certification timeline provision deemed to conflict with statutory deadlines and adjusting voter protection rules to align with court directives, actions framed by critics as reactive concessions amid ongoing partisan scrutiny.[78] These episodes highlight tensions between executive efficiency in election administration and legislative pushes for procedural safeguards, with no evidence of irregularities in 2024 election outcomes but persistent allegations from opponents that abbreviated processes erode public trust.[79]Responses to federal and partisan challenges
In response to partisan challenges from Republican-affiliated organizations, including the Republican National Committee and America First Legal, Adrian Fontes modified the Arizona Elections Procedures Manual (EPM) on August 4, 2025, to comply with court rulings deeming certain provisions an overreach of authority.[65] These alterations included removing illustrative examples of illegal voter intimidation—such as threatening or offensive language—and limiting their application to within a 75-foot radius of polling places, while citing only statutory language; deleting a rule allowing the secretary to finalize statewide results unilaterally if a county missed certification deadlines, and instead permitting legal remedies like court orders; and extending the public comment period to 30 days to align with Administrative Procedures Act requirements.[65] Fontes described the revisions as a balance between safeguarding voter access and adhering to judicial limits on First Amendment restrictions and procedural rules.[65] Fontes defended his rulemaking process before the Arizona Supreme Court against claims that the EPM required full compliance with the Administrative Procedures Act, including extended public input periods. On October 16, 2025, the court unanimously ruled in his favor, affirming that the EPM's adoption under A.R.S. § 16-452 follows a distinct statutory process exempt from standard agency rulemaking formalities, thereby upholding bipartisan precedents and enabling finalization of the 2025 EPM without further delays.[71] This decision rejected arguments from challengers, such as America First Legal's amicus brief asserting violations of transparency laws, and provided legal stability for county election officials preparing for the 2026 cycle.[76] Federally, Fontes rebuffed Department of Justice requests issued on August 12 and 14, 2025, for Arizona's complete voter registration database—including full names, birth dates, addresses, and identification numbers—intended to probe compliance with the National Voter Registration Act from 2020 to 2024. In letters dated August 29 and September 18, 2025, and a public video statement, he refused turnover, citing violations of the Federal Privacy Act of 1974, state felony penalties for unauthorized disclosure, and adherence to the Help America Vote Act; he also highlighted risks of data misuse, referencing whistleblower reports of unsecured federal data handling involving over 300 million Americans' records.[80] In federal litigation, such as American Encore v. Fontes, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on September 16, 2025, struck down EPM provisions banning "offensive" speech or conduct at or near polling places, ruling they impermissibly restricted First Amendment rights beyond statutory bounds.[81] Fontes' office maintained these measures aimed to prevent voter intimidation under existing laws, though the decision limited enforcement to core statutory prohibitions.[81]Electoral history
Maricopa County Recorder races
Adrian Fontes first sought election as Maricopa County Recorder in 2016, challenging long-serving Republican incumbent Helen Purcell, who had held the office since 1988 and faced criticism for election administration issues during the August 2016 primary, including insufficient polling places and long wait times.[18][82] Fontes, a Democrat, attorney, and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, won the general election on November 8, 2016, by a margin of approximately 57,200 votes after provisional and early ballots were counted, securing victory in a county historically dominated by Republicans.[83][18] This outcome marked Fontes as the first Latino elected to a countywide office in Maricopa County, the nation's second-largest voting jurisdiction with over 2.5 million registered voters at the time.[17][2]| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrian Fontes | Democratic | ~804,957 | ~51.8% |
| Helen Purcell | Republican | ~747,757 | ~48.2% |
| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stephen Richer | Republican | 944,953 | 45.40% |
| Adrian Fontes | Democratic | 940,354 | 45.18% |
| Other/Write-in | - | ~198,000 | ~9.42% |
Arizona Secretary of State races
Adrian Fontes sought the office of Arizona Secretary of State in the 2022 election cycle, following his tenure as Maricopa County Recorder. In the Democratic primary on August 2, 2022, Fontes secured the nomination by defeating Reginald Bolding, a state representative, with 52.5% of the vote to Bolding's 47.5%.[88]| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrian Fontes | Democratic | 302,166 | 52.5% |
| Reginald Bolding | Democratic | 273,377 | 47.5% |
| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrian Fontes | Democratic | 1,320,619 | 52.38% |
| Mark Finchem | Republican | 1,200,411 | 47.62% |