The Associated Press is an independent global news organization dedicated to factual reporting.
Associated Press
Latest from Associated Press
-
Cochise County Votes for Hand-Count Despite No Evidence of Voting Equipment Issues
Kari Lake and Mark Finchem tried to require state officials to count ballots by hand in November because of unfounded claims of voting machine problems.
-
Low-Income Communities Learn to Tackle Climate-Fueled Heat
Several nonprofit initiatives have popped up around the country that work to educate and engage residents about climate-fueled heat that disproportionately affects low-income neighborhoods of color.
-
Appeals Court Ruling Allows Arizona Abortions to Restart
Now, the law governing access to abortions will allow the medical procedure up to 15 weeks of pregnancy. before Roe v. Wade was overturned, the limit was 24 weeks.
-
Mark Kelly, Katie Hobbs Face Different Challenges in Statewide Races
Fortunes appear to have flipped for the two Democrats as the midterm campaign enters the home stretch in a fast-growing, diverse state that is increasingly central to how the Democratic Party sees its future.
-
Arizona Clinic Has Workaround for Abortion Pill Ban
Here’s how it works: patients will have an ultrasound in Arizona, get a prescription through a telehealth appointment with a California doctor, and then have it mailed to a post office at the California border, all for free.
-
Arizona Museum Exhibit Marks End to de Kooning Painting Saga
Nearly 40 years after the 1955 oil painting worth millions was brazenly stolen from an Arizona museum, the masterpiece is finally back home and ready to be shown.
-
FACT CHECK: Hobbs Did Not Vote to Stop Students From Learning Pledge of Allegiance
Arizona Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake is misrepresenting the voting record of her opponent, Democrat Katie Hobbs.
-
GOP Escalates Fight Against Citizen-led Ballot Initiatives in Arizona, Other States
Republican lawmakers in Arizona have placed constitutional amendments on the ballot proposing to make it harder to approve citizen initiatives in the future.
-
‘Tale of Two Borders’: Mexicans Not Seen at Busy Crossings
Families from Venezuela, Colombia, Haiti, Cuba, Brazil, India and dozens of other countries arrive in Yuma after wading through the knee-deep Colorado River.
-
Reported Sexual Assaults Across US Military Increase by 13%
According to officials, the overall increase is largely fueled by a nearly 26% jump in reports involving Army soldiers.



















