Michael Carbone

American politician

Michael Carbone
Member of the Arizona House of Representatives
from the 25th district
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 9, 2023
Serving with Tim Dunn
Preceded byRussell Bowers
Personal details
NationalityAmerican
Political partyRepublican
ResidenceBuckeye, Arizona
Signature
WebsiteCampaign Website

Michael Robert Carbone (born February 1973) is an American politician and Republican member of the Arizona House of Representatives elected to represent District 25 in 2022.

Biography

A native of Illinois, Carbone was adopted by his grandparents. As an adult, he was involved with conservative politics while in Illinois, and later moved to Arizona to raise his family.[1]

In 2024, Carbone sponsored state legislation to ban no-excuse early voting in Arizona (no-excuse early voting was ushered into existence in 1991 by Arizona Republicans).[2]

Elections

  • 2022 Carbone and Tim Dunn won the Republican primary for Legislative District 25, defeating incumbent State Representative Joel John. They were unchallenged in the general election.[3]

References

  1. ^ "West Valley Candidate's Life Story Inspires Conservative Beliefs And Personal Attacks". Arizona Daily Independent. June 13, 2022. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  2. ^ Sievers, Caitlin (February 15, 2024). "Republicans want to roll back the clock 30 years and end no-excuse early voting". Arizona Mirror.
  3. ^ "2022 Arizona State House - District 25 Republican Primary Results". The Arizona Republic. August 2, 2022. Retrieved January 11, 2023.

External links

  • Biography at Ballotpedia
  • v
  • t
  • e
56th Legislature (2023–2025)
Speaker of the House
Ben Toma (R)
Speaker pro tempore
Travis Grantham (R)
Majority Leader
Leo Biasiucci (R)
Minority Leader
Lupe Contreras (D)
  1. Quang Nguyen (R)
    Selina Bliss (R)
  2. Judy Schwiebert (D)
    Justin Wilmeth (R)
  3. Joseph Chaplik (R)
    Alexander Kolodin (R)
  4. Matt Gress (R)
    Laura Terech (D)
  5. Sarah Liguori (D)
    Charles Lucking (D)
  6. Myron Tsosie (D)
    Mae Peshlakai (D)
  7. David Cook (R)
    David Marshall (R)
  8. Melody Hernandez (D)
    Deborah Nardozzi (D)
  9. Lorena Austin (D)
    Seth Blattman (D)
  10. Justin Heap (R)
    Barbara Parker (R)
  11. Oscar De Los Santos (D)
    Junelle Cavero (D)
  12. Patty Contreras (D)
    Stacey Travers (D)
  13. Jennifer Pawlik (D)
    Julie Willoughby (R)
  14. Travis Grantham (R)
    Laurin Hendrix (R)
  15. Jacqueline Parker (R)
    Neal Carter (R)
  16. Teresa Martinez (R)
    Keith Seaman (D)
  17. Rachel Jones (R)
    Cory McGarr (R)
  18. Christopher Mathis (D)
    Nancy Gutierrez (D)
  19. Gail Griffin (R)
    Lupe Diaz (R)
  20. Alma Hernandez (D)
    Betty Villegas (D)
  21. Consuelo Hernandez (D)
    Stephanie Stahl Hamilton (D)
  22. Lupe Contreras (D)
    Elda Luna-Nájera (D)
  23. Mariana Sandoval (D)
    Michele Peña (R)
  24. Lydia Hernandez (D)
    Analise Ortiz (D)
  25. Tim Dunn (R)
    Michael Carbone (R)
  26. Cesar Aguilar (D)
    Quantá Crews (D)
  27. Kevin Payne (R)
    Ben Toma (R)
  28. David Livingston (R)
    Beverly Pingerelli (R)
  29. Steve Montenegro (R)
    Austin Smith (R)
  30. Leo Biasiucci (R)
    John Gillette (R)


Flag of ArizonaPolitician icon

This article about an Arizona politician is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e