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Last updated on January 14, 2026
The ACLU of Arizona is on the front lines every legislative session, backing laws that strengthen civil rights and liberties and pushing back on those that infringe on those very freedoms. Here's what to expect during Arizona’s 2026 Legislative Session.
Arizona’s most recent legislative session started on January 12, 2026, and is expected to end during the summer. In that time, state lawmakers will introduce legislation, consider bills, debate policy, evaluate the state budget, and pass laws that impact life for all Arizonans.
In 2025, the ACLU of Arizona tracked 116 bills that impacted civil rights and liberties and testified on 70 of them. We expect this legislative session to be another busy one as we advocate for proactive bills to improve the lives of Arizonans and fight back against harmful legislation that strip people of their rights.
Arizona lawmakers work for the Arizonans who voted them into office, not the other way around. That is why we work diligently to testify at the capitol, stop harmful legislation in its tracks, and advocate for the progress we know Arizonans want to see. Every year, we bring the full force of the ACLU of Arizona and thousands of our supporters to defend civil rights and liberties at the legislature:
But nothing is as impactful as having lawmakers hear from you, their constituents.
You can sign up to receive the ACLU of Arizona's Action Alerts to get updated about what is happening at the capitol and learn how to get involved at the legislature this year.
Arizona remains ground zero for baseless attacks on democracy and our state’s voting infrastructure—jeopardizing voters’ access to free and fair elections. We expect more anti-democracy bills will be proposed, but the ACLU of Arizona will continue to be a strong advocate in the voting rights space.
Too many LGBTQ+ Arizonans feel unsafe in the state we all call home because their rights and humanity continue to be hotly debated at the legislature. That is simply unacceptable.
As the Trump administration’s mass deportation agenda intensifies, the rights, vitality, and well-being of all our communities are increasingly at risk. We remain unwavering in our commitment to stand with our immigrant neighbor—many of whom are our own family and friends.
Arizona lawmakers too often favor policies that treat poverty, mental health, and substance use as crimes rather than problems to be solved. This long-standing punitive approach has failed to make our communities safer while making our carceral system more expensive, less effective, and deeply inequitable.
Over the past year, we’ve seen unprecedented attacks on free speech, an open internet, academic freedom, and the right to protest in Arizona and across the county. The government cannot, and must not, decide who can exercise their First Amendment rights.
The federal government and private businesses are increasingly using sophisticated, artificial intelligence-powered surveillance systems to monitor people, threatening privacy, free speech, and civil rights. We are here to ensure Arizonans' right to privacy is upheld and protected, as well as prevent technology from becoming a tool for abuse and control.
Senators and house representatives convene at the capitol for the first time, and the governor gives a speech called the “State of the State.” Legislative hearings begin.
Last day for senators to introduce bills.
Last day for house representatives to introduce bills.
Last day to hear Senate bills in the Senate and to hear house bills in the House.
House bills that have passed in the House move to the Senate. Senate bills that have passed in the Senate move to the House.
Last day to hear house bills in the Senate and to hear senate bills in the House.
By Arizona law, the legislative session should end by the end of the week, but the Speaker of the House and Senate President may extend the session by a week. The session may be extended further by a majority vote of members.
By law, Arizona lawmakers must have passed a state budget by the last day of June, for the next fiscal year.
By completing this form, I agree to receive occasional emails per the terms of the ACLU’s privacy statement.