These Three Arizona Democrats Are Backed by the Soros Family

Progressive policy ambitions meet practical realities as Americans weigh costs and consequences.

Source: Townhall
1 min read
Why This Matters

Three Democrats running for the House out of Arizona, and the Soros family shows up on their donor list. Nobody should be shocked. George Soros and his son Alex have spent years building out a donor network that reaches into state legislature races, DA elections, and now, apparently, Arizona's congressional map for 2026.

New Republican Times Editorial Board

These Three Arizona Democrats Are Backed by the Soros Family
Image via Townhall

<![CDATA[Three Arizona Democrats running for Congress in the 2026 midterms were just caught taking thousands from the Soros family. ]]>

Original source:

Read at Townhall

How We See It

New Republican Times Editorial Board

Three Democrats running for the House out of Arizona, and the Soros family shows up on their donor list. Nobody should be shocked. George Soros and his son Alex have spent years building out a donor network that reaches into state legislature races, DA elections, and now, apparently, Arizona's congressional map for 2026. The pattern is the story here, not the personalities.

What's worth sitting with is how routine this has become. A candidate takes Soros money, gets asked about it, and the answer is always some version of "I don't control who donates to me." Fine, technically true. But when the same family keeps showing up behind candidates who then push the same soft-on-crime, open-border policy priorities the Soros network has bankrolled for a decade, calling it coincidence stretches credulity. Arizona voters watched their border communities absorb the fallout of that agenda in real time. They get to ask why out-of-state money with a track record like this is bankrolling their next representative.

None of this means these three candidates are puppets. Maybe they'd hold the same positions with or without the check. But voters deserve to know who's funding the campaign before they cast a ballot, not after. If a candidate is comfortable with where the money comes from, they should be comfortable saying so plainly instead of leaving it for opposition research to surface. Arizona families dealing with the real costs of failed border policy don't need a lecture about donor disclosure rules. They need someone in Congress who isn't financially tethered to the people who helped create the mess.

Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.