The Arizona Republic

Hobbs appointee resigns after GOP accusation­s over social media posts

- Stacey Barchenger Reach reporter Stacey Barchenger at stacey.barchenger@arizonarep­ublic.com or 480-416-5669.

One of Gov. Katie Hobbs’ appointees to a panel that helps select Arizona judges resigned the post on Thursday in advance of the Senate confirmati­on process, reviving an issue that characteri­zed Hobbs’ first year in office.

Jacob Raiford, a well-known community organizer and American Civil Liberties Union board member, resigned hours before the Senate Judiciary Committee was set to consider his nomination to the Arizona Commission on Appellate Court Appointmen­ts. The commission helps Hobbs pick Arizona Supreme Court and appeals court judges.

The resignatio­n came to light in an announceme­nt from Senate Republican­s, who said they found posts showing “extreme disdain for conservati­ve public officials and a disrespect for the Senate confirmati­on process” when researchin­g Raiford’s social media activity.

“The Constituti­on requires these nominees to review judge candidates impartiall­y, and with his public displays on social media, I don’t know how that can be possible,” said Senate Judiciary Chairman Sen. Anthony Kern, R-Glendale. “It’s unfortunat­e Hobbs once again irresponsi­bly appointed someone to a position of power who clearly should not be there.”

Senate Republican­s shared Raiford’s social media posts from the platform X, formerly known as Twitter. Several criticized conservati­ve lawmakers, including for politicizi­ng the nomination process last year and preventing Hobbs from putting her allies in charge of state agencies.

In one post, Raiford described “extremist conservati­ves holding our government hostage to advance their personal agenda.”

In another, he described Republican Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell as a “villain” and “vessel for violent patriarchy” after she refused to comply with Hobbs’ order consolidat­ing abortion-related prosecutio­ns with Democratic Attorney General Kris Mayes. The shift means no cases will be brought, as Mayes has stated clearly she would not do so.

Raiford, who was named to the commission last fall, told The Arizona Republic he resigned ahead of the committee because he feared that politiciza­tion would continue. He said his work at the ACLU and on the commission required impartiali­ty that he said Kern did not show when considerin­g his appointmen­t.

“Unfortunat­ely, the current makeup of the Senate majority is driven by this type of obstructio­nist toxicity that is not rooted in fairness, that is not rooted in honesty, that is not rooted in objectivit­y,” Raiford said, noting Kern’s own political stances. “That’s no different from the chair who allegedly was on site during the insurrecti­on. Who, me being on the floor during the State of the State address, witnessed the only adult in the room standing up and turning his back towards the governor.”

Kern was at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. during the insurrecti­on and was on Arizona Republican­s’ slate of false electors after the 2020 election. Mayes is investigat­ing those electors who claimed the state went for Trump, not Democrat Joe Biden.

A Trump ally and one of the most conservati­ve Arizona lawmakers, Kern made his distaste of Hobbs known during her annual address to lawmakers in January, turning his back and giving her policy priorities a thumbs down.

Raiford was considered but not chosen for a vacancy in the Legislatur­e last month. He serves as the Arizona representa­tive on the board of the American Civil Liberties Union and vice president of the ACLU’s Arizona chapter. He led protests of police brutality and calls for reform in Phoenix and is co-chair of the Maricopa County Democratic Party Black Engagement Committee.

Hobbs nominated more than two dozen agency leaders in 2023, in her first year as governor. But just six made it through a contentiou­s Senate confirmati­on process led by a new Committee on Director Nomination­s. The governor repeatedly charged that committee was placing politics before putting leaders in charge of agencies that serve Arizonans, while GOP committee members responded that they were doing a thorough vetting of nominees that Hobbs had failed to do.

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