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In Tempe, Arizona, rising electricity costs and debates surrounding data centers are drawing attention to typically low-key elections that determine control over utility companies responsible for building power infrastructure and setting consumer rates.
These issues, which significantly influenced elections in Georgia, New Jersey, and Virginia last year, are now sparking political clashes in Arizona and Alabama. What were once quiet contests are evolving into battlegrounds of political influence.
Even national organizations, such as Turning Point Action—known for rallying young conservative support for former President Donald Trump—are stepping into the fray. Their involvement includes door-to-door canvassing and texting to sway voters in a Tuesday election aimed at reducing the impact of environmentalists on the Salt River Project, the largest public utility in the nation, located in the Phoenix area.
This electoral activity serves as a preview for upcoming campaigns across several states later this year, with at least six states planning elections for utility regulators. Georgia, in particular, is expected to witness another fiercely contested race.
The heightened focus on these elections is pulling the traditionally behind-the-scenes world of elected utility commissioners into the national spotlight. Critics argue that these roles have been historically dominated by powerful insiders or monopolistic entities. Now, they are at the heart of a broader national conversation about how to manage energy demands, such as those from artificial intelligence, without inflating electricity prices.
“And that means suddenly there’s all this pressure,” said Dave Pomerantz of the Energy and Policy Institute, which pushes utilities to keep rates low and use renewable energy sources.
Arizona race draws massive players
In Tuesday’s election that will determine control of Salt River Project, more than three times as many people requested early ballots than two years ago. Yard signs pepper street corners and ratepayers — they must own land to vote — are getting text messages, fliers and door-knockers.
The utility has already been under pressure to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels like coal and natural gas that emit planet-warming greenhouse gases. But now campaign organizations are converging on the race as the fast-growing Phoenix area becomes a destination for data centers and semiconductor factories. The utility projects that it will need to double its power capacity within a decade.
Two rival slates are vying for the board’s majority. One is backed by Turning Point Action, which wants to stop “radical environmentalists.” The other is supported by the Jane Fonda Climate PAC, which is opposing “oil-loving candidates.” Also involved are local chapters of progressive groups, energy interests, construction firms and data center developers.
“If they want to just overnight switch us to solar, there’s a reliability issue, there’s a cost issue there, and we just can’t keep up,” said Jimmy Lindblom, a construction executive who formed the business-backed Arizonans for Responsible Growth. “We’d have blackouts. And so these things are really important to the growth of Arizona.”
Turning Point Action is putting its muscle behind the Arizonans for Responsible Growth slate. They’re also using the election to build momentum ahead of this year’s midterms in the battleground state.
The slate running as the “clean energy” team said Salt River Project’s current majority is too eager to hook up to natural gas, raise rates and embrace data centers. They also said the board is too dismissive of clean energy technologies to meet spiking demand and offers no incentives to install solar panels.
“It’s insane, especially now,” said Randy Miller, a clean energy advocate on SRP’s board.
About a dozen supporters gathered around picnic tables last week at a park in Tempe, arriving as the sun set to canvass for voters who had requested ballots but not returned them. After a brief pep talk, they fanned out.
Some voters were bothered by Turning Point’s involvement.
“Very, very, very troublesome,” said Laura Kajfez, a 66-year-old retiree from Tempe. “We don’t need that intervention in our local politics. We have enough problems as it is.”
In the last two elections, an average of 7,500 ballots were turned in. As of Thursday, with five days of voting remaining, turnout had already topped 22,000, according to SRP.
Campaigning for the Salt River Project board is a complex puzzle. The utility has more than 2 million power and water customers and is governed by byzantine rules. Votes for most positions are weighted by acreage, so large landowners carry outsized sway.
Rising bills fuels push to reshape Alabama commission
In the heavily Republican state of Alabama, anxiety over rising power bills is spilling into the statehouse and onto the campaign trail, fueling a push to reshape the Alabama Public Service Commission. Alabama has some of the highest power rates in the South, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
State lawmakers this week voted to overhaul the commission, effectively shifting more authority to the governor. Supporters described it as a way to address affordability. But it comes ahead of this year’s elections, which some candidates are seeking to make a referendum on electricity prices — similar to how Georgia Democrats won blowout victories in two races for their state’s commission in 2025.
Former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones, who is a Democratic candidate for Alabama governor, called the bill a “first-rate con job” on voters.
“Republicans in the Alabama Legislature want to completely revamp the PSC because all of the sudden after two wins in Georgia, they realize that maybe the people don’t like what’s going on with the PSC,” Jones said on social media.
The legislation, which was signed by Gov. Kay Ivey, will expand the three-member commission to seven elected members. The four new members will be initially appointed by the governor. In addition, utilities will be forbidden from raising retail base rates until 2029.
Republican legislative leaders said the bill was a significant step forward for consumer protection.
“The Alabama Legislature passed HB475 to put a freeze on electric rates and to give the people of Alabama broader representation on the Public Service Commission,” Ivey said. House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter and Senate President Pro Tem Garlan Gudger said in a joint statement that lawmakers “stood united to reform how utilities are regulated and demand an unprecedented amount of accountability for consumers across the state.”
Two of the current three seats on the commission are up for election this year, and Republican incumbents face both primary challengers and Democratic opponents running on the message of affordability.
Democrats are pointing to Georgia’s election as a model for how the party can be successful, even in a GOP-dominated state like Alabama.
“What happened in Georgia could happen in Alabama,” said Tabitha Isner, vice chair of the Alabama Democratic Party. “That’s why the alarm bells are going off and so much money is being poured into maintaining the status quo.”
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Levy reported from Harrisburg, Pa., and Chandler from Montgomery, Ala.