The Arizona Constitution is divided into a preamble and 30 articles, numbered 1–6, 6.1, 7–22, and 25–30, with articles 23 and 24 having been repealed. Article 30 is no longer in force due to being ruled illegal. •
Preamble •
Article 1 declares the boundaries of the state in great detail. •
Article 2 titled the Declaration of Rights and is the state's equivalent of the
Bill of Rights. At the time the Arizona Constitution was adopted, the
United States Supreme Court had not yet ruled that the
Bill of Rights in the
United States Constitution was applicable to or binding upon the states. In 2024, Article 2 was amended to contain an explicit right to abortion. •
Article 3 declares the state government shall be divided into three distinct divisions, the
legislative,
executive and
judicial. •
Article 4 establishes the legislature and the people through
initiative as legislative authority for the state and outlines the qualifications for state
House of Representatives and
Senate and the division of districts (30 districts to elect 1 senator and 2 representatives). •
Article 5 outlines the qualifications for
Governor and other
Executive branch officials and to their duties. •
Article 6 frames the court system including the
Supreme Court and
superior court and qualifications for judges. •
Article 6.1 creates a Commission on Judicial Conduct to oversee the judicial system. •
Article 7 deals with suffrage and elections. •
Article 8 provides the method of removal from office for all elected officials including judges, legislators, and executive officials either through
impeachment or
recall. •
Article 9 provides taxation powers to the legislature and limits the amount of debt for the state's political divisions. •
Article 10 concerns the usage of state and school lands. •
Article 11 concerns education in the state and that all public schools be free. Establishes
Board of Education and
Superintendent of Public Instruction. •
Article 12 deals with the
counties of the state. •
Article 13 deals with cities, towns and other municipal corporations. •
Article 14 deals with general corporations. •
Article 15 establishes the Corporation Commission to regulate corporations as well as the rates of public utilities. •
Article 16 concerns the
militia and national guard. •
Article 17 declares the
common law riparian system of
water rights void and reconfirms preexisting
appropriated water rights. •
Article 18, as well as
Article 25, concerns labor, regulating
child labor, defining a work day to be 8 hours, and declaring Arizona a
right to work state. •
Article 19 creates the office of State Mine Inspector and the inspection of mines operating in the state. •
Article 20 concern specific topics that while normally outside of Congress's
subject jurisdiction, are controlled by Congress. This includes the right to
religious freedom, banning of
polygamy, public and Indian lands, banning importation of intoxicating liquors onto Indian reserves until 1957, and state officials required to speak, read, and write English, among other things. These sections can only be repealed with the approval of Congress; however, since the
U.S. Supreme Court invalidated a similar restriction in
Coyle v. Smith, the validity of that rule is unclear. •
Article 21 outlines the mode of amending the Constitution. •
Article 22 deals with scheduling and miscellaneous topics. •
Articles 23 and
24 both concerned
prohibition and were repealed in 1932. •
Articles 26,
27, and
29 are short articles dealing with real estate agents, the regulation of ambulances, and public retirement systems. Article 27 specifies that Arizona citizens may not be forced to purchase healthcare or fined for not purchasing such care. •
Article 28 concerns English as the official language. •
Article 29 deals with public retirement systems. •
Article 30 restricts marriage to a man and a woman. ==Oddities==