Democrat Adelita Grijalva wins special election for southern Arizona
congressional seat
[September 24, 2025]
By SEJAL GOVINDARAO
PHOENIX (AP) — Southern Arizona voters on Tuesday chose Adelita Grijalva
to succeed her father, the late U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva, a progressive
Democrat who represented the state for more than two decades in
Congress.
She defeated Republican candidate Daniel Butierez in the 7th
Congressional District, which hugs almost the entire length of Arizona’s
border with Mexico. The decisive win — early returns showed Grijalva
with more than double the number of votes as her Republican opponent —
will make Grijalva the first Latina to represent Arizona in Congress.
The seat was one of two remaining vacancies in blue districts that
Democrats needed to hold to avoid losing more ground to Republicans in
the U.S. House.
Grijalva thanked voters late Tuesday on social media, saying they made
history together. “Now, let’s get to work.”
Grijalva retired from the Pima County Board of Supervisors and launched
her bid for Congress shortly after her father's death in March. She said
Tuesday he was the inspiration for her time in public service and a
unifying figure among environmentalists, reproductive and immigrant
rights advocates, and LGBTQ+ organizers who were seeking justice and
equality.
“Fifty years later, that movement is alive and well in all of us,” she
said in a statement. “This victory belongs to the people — el pueblo.”
Grijalva will serve the final months of her father's term.
Butierez told The Associated Press that he was puzzled by the results
because of the bipartisan turnout at his watch party but not bothered
because he didn't aspire to be a politician. Butierez, who owns a
painting company, lost to Raúl Grijalva in 2024. This time around, he
campaigned on border security and addressing homelessness, an issue with
which he had personal experience.

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Arizona Democratic candidate Adelita Grijalva, center right, smiles
as she is hugged by her family after being declared the winner
against Republican Daniel Butierez to fill the Congressional
District 7 seat held by the late U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva in a
special election Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP
Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Democrats enjoy a nearly 2-1 voter registration advantage over
Republicans in the mostly Hispanic district. Much of the region has been
represented by Democrats since Arizona first became a state in 1912.
Earlier Tuesday, friends and family of Adelita Grijalva gathered at a
well-known events center in Tucson to await the results, with music and
food. Speakers addressed the crowd both in English and Spanish.
Grijalva voiced support for limiting immigration operations, protecting
health care and advocating for environmental justice. She said she would
find ways to help take power away from President Donald Trump so he
could not unilaterally decide on imposing tariffs.
“There’s an opportunity for us to try to convince people that who they
need to represent is the people that elected them and their community
and not billionaires and corporations," Grijalva told reporters at her
watch party Tuesday night.
Grijalva’s victory improves Democrats' chances of forcing a vote on
making the Justice Department release case files on the sex trafficking
investigation into the late Jeffrey Epstein, the Democratic National
Committee said in a statement. Grijalva pledged to sign the petition to
force a vote on the files.
___
Associated Press journalist Ross D. Franklin in Tucson contributed to
this story.
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