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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Rachel Leingang

Adelita Grijalva expected to win her late father’s House seat in Arizona special election

a woman speaks
Adelita Grijalva at a Democratic primary debate in Tucson, Arizona, on 10 June 2025. Photograph: Mamta Popat/Arizona Daily Star via AP

Adelita Grijalva, the daughter of the late progressive congressman Raúl Grijalva, is expected to win a special election on Tuesday to fill the seat left open when her father died earlier this year.

Grijalva faces Republican challenger Daniel Butierez in the heavily blue seventh district in Arizona, which covers the southern parts of the state and the borderland areas.

Raúl Grijalva held the seat for more than two decades, until his death at 77 in March. His daughter will become the first Latina that Arizona has sent to Congress.

Filling the seat will narrow Republicans’ advantage in the House, where Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” passed by only one vote.

Adelita Grijalva, a longtime local elected official in southern Arizona, fended off Democratic challengers in a primary that attracted national attention amid an ongoing debate over the future of the Democratic party, and in particular its ageing candidates, as Raúl Grijalva was one of multiple Democratic lawmakers to die in office this year.

The younger Grijalva, 54, faced criticisms from her main challenger, Deja Foxx, a 25-year-old influencer, over what Foxx called her “legacy last name”. Grijalva defended her own record in politics, but didn’t shy away from her family’s legacy in the district either. She served for 20 years on a Tucson school board and has been a Pima county supervisor since 2020. She also received endorsements from scores of heavyweight progressives and statewide elected officials.

“I’m not using my dad’s last name,” Grijalva told the Guardian earlier this year. “It’s mine, too. I’ve worked in this community for a very long time – 26 years at a non-profit, 20 years on the school board, four years and four months on the board of supervisors. I’ve earned my last name, too.”

Grijalva, a progressive, has said upholding democracy, standing up for immigrants’ rights, and protecting access to Medicaid and Medicare are among her top priorities. She said during the primary that, if elected, she wants to push for Medicaid for All and the Green New Deal.

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