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Map of the state of Arizona, showing portions of surrounding states

Arizona Governor vetoes Charlie Kirk license plate bill

© iStock - klenger
Caitlin Sievers
(Arizona Mirror)

Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs has vetoed a bill that would have created a specialty license plate in honor of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed while speaking at a college campus in Utah last year.

“Charlie Kirk’s assassination is tragic and a horrifying act of violence,” Hobbs wrote in her veto letter. “In America, we resolve our political differences at the ballot box. No matter who it targets, political violence puts us all in harm’s way and damages our sacred democratic institutions.”

For each person who chose the speciality plate, a portion of the fees would have gone to the nonprofit branch of Turning Point USA, the controversial right-wing organization that Kirk founded in 2012.

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Charlie Kirk - Matt Johnson

Charlie Kirk - © Matt Johnson CC BY 2.0

When she vetoed Senate Bill 1439 on Friday, Hobbs agreed with previous comments from other Democrats that specialty license plates issued by the state aren’t the place for politics.

“I will continue working toward solutions that bring people together, but this bill falls short of that standard by inserting politics into a function of government that should remain nonpartisan,” she wrote.

The bill was sponsored by Senator Jake Hoffman, a Queen Creek Republican and founder of the far-right Arizona Freedom Caucus, who worked closely with Kirk and whose companies have been paid millions of dollars by TPUSA.

But Hoffman vehemently denied that his business relationships with Turning Point USA were connected to his sponsorship of the bill, saying that he and Kirk became close personal friends after they began working together more than a decade ago.

Hoffman excoriated Hobbs for her veto decision in a text to the Arizona Mirror.

“Katie Hobbs’ grotesque partisanship knows no bounds,” he said. “Even in the wake of a global civil rights leader — an Arizona resident and her own constituent — being assassinated in broad daylight for his defense of the First Amendment, Hobbs couldn’t find the human decency to put her far-Left extremism aside simply to allow those how wish to honor him to do so. Katie Hobbs will forever be known as a stain on the pages of Arizona’s story.”

Some Democratic opponents of the bill argued that a wealthy, private organization didn’t need the government’s help to collect donations.

Like other specialty license plates in the Grand Canyon State, for every driver that paid $25 to get the Kirk specialty plate, the far-right advocacy group would have gotten $17.

TPUSA brought in $84 million in 2024, while Turning Point Action brought in more than $27 million.

Democratic Representative Patty Contreras pointed out during a Jan. 28 House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee meeting that Republicans had been blocking Democrats from creating a LGBTQ+ pride specialty plate for years.

SB1439 is just one of the bills proposed by Republicans this year to honor Kirk. Hoffman also sponsored Senate Bill 1686, which would allow statues of both Kirk and journalist Don Bolles to be erected in Wesley Bolin Plaza, across from the Arizona Capitol. Bolles was killed in a car bombing in 1976 related to his investigative reporting work.

SB1686 passed the Senate on March 4 by a vote of 16-14, with one Republican voting against it alongside Democrats.

Another bill, sponsored by Senate President Warren Petersen, of Gilbert, would rename the Loop 202 “Charlie Kirk Loop 202.”

That bill passed along party lines in the Senate on Feb. 18, but hasn’t yet had a hearing in the House.