ARIZONA GOVERNMENT EDUCATION ARIZONA ELECTIONS GOVERNMENT POLITICS May 28, 2025 / Modified may 28, 2025 5:08 p.m.

State Treasurer Kimberly Yee to run for schools post

Yee is challenging Superintendent Tom Horne

Kimberly Yee hero Arizona State Treasurer Kimberly Yee speaking with attendees at the 2024 Legislative Forecast Luncheon hosted by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona.
Gage Skidmore

Republican State Treasurer Kimberly Yee is setting her sights on a new role–superintendent of public instruction. Yee is challenging incumbent Tom Horne, a fellow republican. She announced her bid this morning through a video posted on social media.

“Arizona’s children are too important for empty promises and cheap campaign lip service,” her campaign video said. “It’s time for real results. It’s time for Kimberly Yee for Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction."

Over recent weeks, Republican circles, such as the Freedom Caucus, have pushed for a state education leader who would better support issues like universal school vouchers. Conservative leaders, including Senator Jake Hoffman, see Yee as the answer.

Horne has also long advocated for universal school voucher funding, but has recently faced criticism for encouraging spending limits on supplementary items like home economics equipment. Some republicans see this move as an overreach.

“Tom Horne is the single greatest threat to school choice,” Hoffman told reporters back in April. “Tom Horne is the single greatest threat to the ESA program.”

Horne pushed back on Hoffman’s claims.

Yee served in the Arizona House of Representatives from 2011 to 2013 and later in the Senate from 2013 to 2019. Arizonans voted Yee into her current role as the state’s top financial officer. In January 2021, she announced her bid for Governor but withdrew in 2022 to re-run for treasurer.

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