Don't take the bet; I already know he is happy.
A few days ago, I wrote a post updating my legislative schedule post about how the Senate committee on Director Nominations was going to meet to consider the nomination of Carmen Heredia to be the director of AHCCCS.
That was rendered moot by subsequent events.
From AZ Mirror, written by Gloria Rebecca Gomez -
Two top Arizona health officials resign amid ‘unprecedented politicization’ of process
Two of Arizona’s top public health officials have resigned rather than face an acrimonious confirmation process at the legislature, where Republicans have used agency director hearings to play hardball politics with Gov. Katie Hobbs and stymie her government.
On Wednesday, Hobbs announced that Jennie Cunico, the director of the Arizona Department of Health Services, and Carmen Heredia, who heads Arizona’s Health Care Cost Containment System, the state’s Medicaid program, have stepped down from their positions. Heredia was scheduled to go before the state Senate’s Committee on Director Nominations for consideration on Thursday.
[snip]
Republicans celebrated the resignations. Sen. Jake Hoffman, a Republican from Queen Creek who chairs the Director Nominations Committee and who also heads the legislature’s far-right Arizona Freedom Caucus, said they are a “testament” to the work done by lawmakers to ensure candidates are the best choice for Arizonans.
Hoffman denounced Heredia for what he said was “mismanagement” of the state’s Medicaid program and blamed her for the sober home living fraud that targeted Arizona’s indigenous community and cost taxpayers $2.5 billion.
Note1: Governor Hobbs' press release on the resignations is here.
Note2: Hoffman's Snoopy Dance press release celebrating the resignations is here.
Note3: The sober home living fraud that killed people took place during the administration of Doug Ducey, one of his fellow Republicans. Hoffman can try to blame the folks who found it and put a stop to it, but his blame-shifting doesn't change the reality of the fraud.
Hoffman has an "interesting" sense of timing. The U.S. is experiencing a massive measles outbreak and Hoffman thinks that Arizona losing two of its top public health officials now is a good thing.
Caveat: As of this writing, there are no reported measles infections in Arizona.
From the CDC -
While there are no reported cases in AZ, it may just be a matter of time.
From Axios, written by Jeremy Duda and Jaden Amos, dated March 5 -
Low vaccination rates a warning sign for measles in Arizona
Arizona hasn't had a reported measles case so far this year, but red flags are leading some experts to worry we could see an outbreak like the one in Texas.
Why it matters: Some Arizona counties have lower measles vaccination rates than in west Texas, where the outbreak has infected at least 159 people since it was first reported in early February and has killed one child.
What they're saying: There are "places here where it could spin out of control, just like it has in Texas. The conditions are right here for that to happen in some parts of the state," Arizona Public Health Association executive director Will Humble told Axios.
As kids are the ones who have died from measles in 2025 the kindergarten vaccination rates in the 2022-2023 school year, from the Arizona Department of Health Services -
Wonder if the kingmaker-wannabe (in Republican politics, anyway) is aware that dead people don't vote, even in R primaries?
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