PHOENIX ā Arizonans wonāt be electing school board members by political party, posting the Ten Commandments in public schools or declaring that a personās sex is permanently defined by what they were at birth.
All those measures were vetoed Tuesday by Gov. Katie Hobbs. That brings the number of measures approved by the Republican controlled Legislature this session that she finds unacceptable to 42.
And there are still pending bills.
Most of what Hobbs rejected are no surprise. And that starts with SB 1628.
Sen. Sine Kerr, R-Buckeye, said that defining in state law who is male and who is female āprovides much-needed clarity in our statutes and uniformity in the courts.ā That also includes who can participate in what sports.
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Kerr cited cases ā all from other states ā where transgender individuals or males who identify as females have decided to participate in womenās sports and injured players who were born female.
Foes like Sen. Anna Hernandez said if Kerr wanted to pass what she dubbed the āWomenās Bill of Rightsāā she should focus on things like preventing gender violence, sex discrimination, affordable child care and access to reproductive health care āthat would benefit all of us.āā
Hobbs, who previously has vetoed several measures dealing with transgender rights, had a simpler message.
āAs I have said time and again, I will not sign legislation that attacks Arizonans,āā she wrote.
The governor had a slightly longer explanation of her decision to veto SB 1097. That measure, crafted by Sen. Justine Wadsack, R-Tucson, would have required those running for school boards to list their party affiliation.
Wadsack argued that most voters really donāt know much about school board candidates. She said that party label would provide some inkling in what they believe.
Hobbs was not convinced.
āThis bill will further the politicization and polarization of Arizonaās school district governing boards whose focus should remain on making the best decision for students,āā the governor wrote in rejecting the legislation. āPartisan politics do not belong in Arizonaās schools.āā
Wadsack had no better luck with her SB 1189, which would have barred local governments from prohibiting gun shows within their jurisdiction or adopting any rules that have the same effect.
She said Tucson has enacted rules that have driven gun shows out of the cityās convention center, with the result of them moving into unincorporated areas of Pima County. Wadsack said now the county is weighing its own restrictions.
āThis is a slippery slope to restricting our rights,āā she said.
Hobbs pointed out that she vetoed the exact same legislation in 2023.
āMy position remains unchanged,āā she said. āThis bill needlessly restricts the authority of political subdivisions to make decisions about how to keep their communities safe.āā
The governor was no more willing to approve legislation which would add the Ten Commandments to the list of items that teachers and administrators already can display and read in classrooms. These range from the Declaration of Independence and the National Anthem to the Mayflower Compact and the national motto of āIn God We Trust.āā
Sen. Anthony Kern, R-Glendale, who crafted the bill, said he blames āthe progressive slide in our countryāā to removal of the Commandments from classrooms.
Hobbs, however, said she has āserious concernsāā about whether the measure would survive a constitutional challenge.
That is based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that a mandate to post the Commandments violated constitutional provisions forbidding the establishment of religion by government. The justices said the purpose of the display was essentially religious.
Hobbs also swatted down another proposal by Kern, this one which would have prohibited governments from erecting āāno right on redāā signs unless an engineer certified it was necessary at a given intersection.
But SB 1299 also had a social component.
During a hearing on the measure, Jay Beeber, policy director for the National Motorist Association, said the decision of some communities to erect such signs is āpart of a larger agenda to restrict our movements, to restrict the ability to use a car and make it slower and more difficult.āā
Hobbs called the measure āunnecessary and redundant.āā She said state and local jurisdictions already follow traffic engineering guidelines and standards when determining traffic movement.
And she rejected SB 1146, another Kern measure which would have barred the director of the state Department of Agriculture or the state veterinarian from requiring the administration of any mRNA vaccine that has not received full federal approval.
Messenger RNA, a genetic material, has been used to in creating vaccines to immunize the body against certain types of virus. It was specifically part of the development of vaccines to fight COVID-19 which, in turn, made it part of the controversy among those who opposed its use.
Hobbs said vaccines are an important tool for Arizona ranchers and farmers.
āThe Arizona Department of Agriculture may rely on the use of mRNA vaccines in the future to mitigate disease outbreaks,āā she wrote. āThis bill would pose a risk to the health and safety of Arizonans, as well as the vitality of cattle ranchers and farmers.āā
Other bills that Hobbs rejected Wednesday include:
SB 1509 requiring the signatures of the medical provider who is performing a surgical procedure as well as the patient or decision maker, as well as a witness. Hobbs called it āunnecessary,āā saying it already is standard practice to receive informed consent from patients prior to care.
SB 1289 mandating the governor and the Department of Water Resources to submit copies of any report on hydrologic conditions in an active management area to certain lawmakers 30 days before issuing the report. The governor said the agency already publishes such reports and the bill would ādrown the department in paperwork and bureaucracy.āā
SB 1153 spelling out that certain proposed agency rules have to first be ratified by the Legislature. Hobbs said it would ācreate an unnecessary burden on state agencies that would inhibit their ability to carry out duties in a timely manner.āā
Howard Fischer is a veteran journalist who has been reporting since 1970 and covering state politics and the Legislature since 1982. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, and Threads at @azcapmedia or email azcapmedia@gmail.com.

