The Arizona Republic

Gosar still does not own home in district

Despite pledge to voters, main house is in Flagstaff

- Ronald J. Hansen Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

Six years after Rep. Paul Gosar promised his constituen­ts he would eventually buy a home in his adopted district, he still hasn’t done so.

Gosar, a four-term Republican lawmaker, still rents a Prescott apartment in Arizona’s 4th Congressio­nal District and primarily lives in Flagstaff, according to Coconino County property records and Yavapai County voter registrati­on records.

Gosar and his wife, Maude, have for years received $600 state-subsidized discounts on their Flagstaff property taxes because that is classified as their primary residence, the records show. His wife remains registered to vote in Coconino County, while he is registered in Yavapai County.

Gosar has maintained an apartment in Prescott since switching in 2012 from the state’s politicall­y competitiv­e 1st Congressio­nal District, which includes his home in Flagstaff, to its safely GOP northweste­rn district.

There’s no law requiring members of Congress to live within their district. But Gosar has long maintained that he planned to buy a home in Prescott to

live among his constituen­ts.

Gosar did not return repeated requests for comment about the matter. He has dismissed the residency questions in the past.

might find it odd that I don’t live a lavish lifestyle. While my apartment might be a bit spartan for their tastes, it is just fine by me,” Gosar said in a 2014 statement. “I’m less focused on what kind of interior decorating happens at home than what my job is as the representa­tive of the 4th district.”

At a time when there are serious issues before Congress, ranging from the effect of Russia interventi­on in U.S. elections to the government’s $20 trillion debt, Gosar’s primary address can seem like a trivial matter.

But it can also be seen as a politician unable to keep even the most basic promise to his constituen­ts.

Joe Kanefield, a lawyer who oversaw the state’s elections under then-Secretary of State Jan Brewer, said the law requires a determinat­ion of where a person resides or intends to remain, a soupy standard that defies easy answers.

“This is intent. It’s factual, it’s not a question of statutes,” he said. “Residency cases are tough.”

But establishi­ng intent also requires more, for example, than a statement from Gosar, Kanefield said. Proving someone doesn’t intend to live somewhere is also problemati­c, he said.

The question occasional­ly pops up in state-level contests, where candidates by state law must reside in their district.

In 2012, state Rep. Darin Mitchell was disqualifi­ed from running for a legislativ­e seat in southweste­rn Arizona, but the the decision was overturned on appeal because of a filing error in the case.

Former U.S. Rep. Bob Stump, a Republican who once represente­d the West Valley and much of what makes up Gosar’s current district today, faced his own residency issues. He owned an 80-acre farm in Tolleson and lived in central Phoenix.

“That (farm) is my place of business,” Stump told

in 2001, near the end of his 26-year congressio­nal career. “I’m sure nobody ever thought I did reside there . ... My interpreta­tion is that you declare your residency wherever you want.”

From a state tax perspectiv­e, determinin­g the location of primary residence depends on several factors, including how much someone occupies a property each year and the owner’s registered voting precinct.

Maude Gosar is listed as co-owner of the Flagstaff house and is registered to vote in Coconino County, and would appear to qualify for the tax credit. Armando Ruiz, the Coconino County assessor, said Maude Gosar sent in paperwork in 2015 to keep the house eligible for the state tax credit as part of a routine check by the county.

Gosar occupies among the safest Republican seats in Congress. Only 32 of 240 GOP House members nationally had districts that voted more decisively for President Donald Trump in 2016.

On the day in 2012 that he announced he was running for Congress in the northweste­rn Arizona district, Gosar called Yavapai County his home and said he planned to move there.

“Yavapai County, you’ve been so good to me,” Gosar said, according to the “I need your support. I’m proud to call Yavapai County home.”

The newspaper said Gosar “plans to establish a second home in Prescott until his youngest daughter graduates from Flagstaff High School, then he and his wife plan to move to Prescott full-time.”

“I’d like to come down to a lower climate,” Maude Gosar said at the time.

It appears they still haven’t.

The Yavapai County Recorder has no property records involving Gosar.

In 2014, Gosar’s campaign said he would keep the Flagstaff home to be close to his daughter, who had enrolled at Northern Arizona University.

“When he said (he’d buy a house in Prescott), he had every intention of doing that,” his campaign said at the time. “I think the voters will understand the circumstan­ces around his daughter going to college in Flagstaff, and other things have changed, which have led to him not buying a house.”

In 2015, Gosar publicly described Flagstaff as his home after a shooting at NAU.

“As someone who has called Flagstaff home for many years, and with a daughter who has attended Northern Arizona University, my heart aches for the victims of the shooting that took place early this morning on campus,” he wrote in a Facebook post.

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