Jake Hoffman – Arizona State Senator
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Jake Hoffman – Arizona State Senator

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Jake Hoffman – Arizona State Senator

Category: State Legislator
Role: Arizona State Senator, District 15; formerly State Representative; Fake Elector (2020); Arizona Freedom Caucus Chairman
Priority: P1 (Indicted for fake elector scheme; election denier; sponsors voter suppression bills; RNC committeeman despite criminal charges)

## Role

Jake Hoffman is an Arizona state senator (formerly state representative) who was one of 11 Republicans who signed a document on December 14, 2020, falsely claiming to be Arizona’s official presidential electors for Donald Trump. He was indicted in April 2024 along with 17 others for the fake elector scheme and pleaded not guilty to felony charges. He currently chairs the Arizona Freedom Caucus and serves as the state’s Republican National Committeeman—a position he was elected to days after his indictment.

## Background

Hoffman was elected to the Arizona House of Representatives and later moved to the Arizona Senate. He has been a consistent advocate for election restrictions and has sponsored multiple bills requiring additional citizenship verification and residency documentation for voter registration. His leadership of the Arizona Freedom Caucus positions him as a power broker among the legislature’s most conservative members.

## Documented Actions

### 1. Participation in Fake Elector Scheme (December 2020-January 2021)

Evidence: On December 14, 2020, Hoffman was one of 11 Republicans who signed a document falsely claiming to be Arizona’s official presidential electors for Donald Trump, despite Joe Biden having won Arizona and the state’s certified electors being pledged to Biden. The document falsely described the signers as “duly elected and qualified Electors” when they had no legal authority.

On January 5, 2021—the day before the Capitol riot—Hoffman sent a letter to Vice President Mike Pence urging him to delay counting Arizona’s electoral votes and ask the state legislature to clarify “which slate of electors were proper and accurate,” without disclosing that he himself was one of the fraudulent electors. This concealment exemplified the scheme’s deceptive nature.

In April 2024, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes indicted Hoffman along with 17 others, including Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and attorneys Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman. Mayes stated the defendants “deceived the citizens of Arizona” and “intended that the false votes for Trump and Pence would encourage Vice President Pence to reject the certified Biden-Harris electors’ votes.” Hoffman pleaded not guilty to felony charges in Maricopa County court in June 2024.

Sources: Arizona Republic, January 2022 and June 2024; NBC News, April 2024; Bluffton Today (AP wire), February 2022

Pattern: Fake elector scheme; attempt to overturn legitimate election; concealment of conflict of interest; ongoing criminal prosecution

### 2. Election as RNC Committeeman Days After Indictment (April 2024)

Evidence: Days after his indictment in April 2024, the Arizona Republican Party elected Hoffman as national committeeman for the Republican National Committee. This selection made Hoffman one of Arizona’s two representatives to the RNC despite facing felony charges for attempting to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

NBC News and other national media outlets characterized this as demonstrating how the Arizona GOP rewarded election denial and Trump loyalty even in the face of criminal charges. The Arizona GOP’s decision reflected the party’s continued embrace of figures involved in election subversion attempts. Hoffman’s dual role as an indicted fake elector and RNC committeeman exemplifies how election denial has become not merely tolerated but celebrated within parts of the Republican Party.

Sources: NBC News, April 2024; Arizona Republic coverage

Pattern: Institutional reward for election subversion; party elevation of criminally charged figures

### 3. Sponsorship of Voter Suppression Bills HB 2492 and HB 2243 (2022)

Evidence: As a state representative in 2022, Hoffman was the primary sponsor of two restrictive voting bills:

HB 2492 (voter registration; verification; citizenship): Required additional citizenship verification for voter registration, with co-sponsors including Representatives Blackman, Carter, Chaplik, Fillmore, Kaiser, Martinez, Nguyen, Parker, Toma, and Wilmeth. The bill was signed into law.

HB 2243 (voter registration; state residency; cancellation): Required additional state residency documentation and authorized cancellation of voter registrations, with co-sponsors including Representatives Pingerelli, Barton, Carroll, Parker, Kavanagh, Fillmore, Chaplik, Burges, Biasiucci, Nguyen, and Blackman. This bill was also signed into law.

Both bills created additional barriers to voter registration by requiring documentation that some eligible voters may lack, particularly naturalized citizens and those without traditional proof of residency. The bills reflected a pattern of using citizenship and residency verification as mechanisms to restrict ballot access, despite Arizona already having robust verification systems and no evidence of widespread non-citizen voting or fraudulent registration.

Sources: Arizona Legislature bill tracking; PolicyEngage legislative tracking; azleg.gov bill text

Pattern: Legislative authorship of voter suppression; citizenship verification barriers; residency documentation requirements

### 4. Arizona Freedom Caucus Leadership

Evidence: Hoffman serves as chairman of the Arizona Freedom Caucus, a group of the legislature’s most conservative Republicans. The Arizona Republic profiled him as personifying “conservative power” in Arizona politics, noting his combination of Freedom Caucus leadership and involvement in the fake elector scheme. His caucus chairmanship gives him influence over a bloc of legislators who often vote together on election-related bills and other conservative priorities.

The Freedom Caucus’s power within the Arizona Legislature means Hoffman’s leadership role amplifies his influence beyond his individual votes and bill sponsorships. His ability to coordinate multiple legislators on election bills makes him a more significant threat to voting rights than his individual actions alone would suggest.

Sources: Arizona Republic, September 2023

Pattern: Legislative power broker; coordination of conservative voting bloc; amplified influence through caucus leadership

Pattern Analysis

Hoffman exemplifies multiple patterns within the public-corruption-ombudsman skill: “election denialism” (fake elector scheme), “voter suppression” (HB 2492, HB 2243 authorship), and “democratic backsliding” (continued elevation despite criminal charges). His case is particularly significant because it combines actual criminal conduct (indicted fake elector), institutional power (Freedom Caucus chair, RNC committeeman), and ongoing legislative authorship of voting restrictions. His trajectory—from fake elector to indicted defendant to RNC committeeman—demonstrates how election subversion has been rewarded rather than punished within the Arizona GOP.

Related profiles: kelly-townsend-profile (AZ Senate committee chair), mark-finchem-profile (AZ SoS candidate and fake elector), kari-lake-profile (AZ gubernatorial candidate), anthony-kern-profile (AZ fake elector)

Related skills: fifth-amendment-legal-expert (fake elector criminal prosecution), first-amendment-legal-expert (election denial speech), voting-rights-law-expert, fourteenth-amendment-legal-expert (Section 3 insurrectionist disqualification question)

Severity Assessment

Immediate harm: High – fake elector scheme threatened constitutional order; voter suppression bills created registration barriers; ongoing influence through Freedom Caucus Democratic erosion: Very High – criminal attempt to overturn election; party reward despite indictment; legislative power to advance restrictions Authoritarian marker: Fake elector scheme; concealment of conflict; institutional elevation despite criminal charges; ongoing legislative assault on voting rights


Accountability Status

Current status: Serving Arizona State Senator and RNC National Committeeman; indicted April 2024; pleaded not guilty June 2024; awaiting trial on felony charges Legal exposure: Facing felony charges in Maricopa County for fake elector scheme; co-defendants include Mark Meadows, Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, and other Trump associates Public accountability: Indicted by Arizona Attorney General; elevated to RNC position by Arizona GOP despite charges; HB 2492 and HB 2243 signed into law and subject to legal challenges


2022-2026 Updates

Election status: Won election to Arizona State Senate (moved from House); currently serving. Elected RNC National Committeeman for Arizona in April 2024, days after indictment. Legal outcomes: Indicted April 2024 with 17 others for fake elector scheme; pleaded not guilty June 2024. A judge overturned the original indictment (2025), ruling the grand jury was not shown the Electoral Count Act of 1887. AG Mayes pursuing re-indictment or appeal. Arizona Supreme Court rejected Hoffman’s attempt to remove an appellate judge (May 2025). Anti-SLAPP defense pending—could dismiss the case entirely. Received federal pardon from President Trump; Trump DOJ restored his firearms rights (March 2026) despite active state charges. Subsequent actions: Continues as Arizona Freedom Caucus Chairman and RNC committeeman. HB 2492 (citizenship verification) and HB 2243 (residency requirements) both signed into law in 2022.


Cross-References

Skills: public-corruption-ombudsman, fifth-amendment-legal-expert, voting-rights-law-expert, first-amendment-legal-expert, fourteenth-amendment-legal-expert

Related profiles: kelly-townsend-profile, mark-finchem-profile, kari-lake-profile, rudy-giuliani-profile, mark-meadows-profile

Topics: Arizona fake electors, 2020 election subversion, criminal indictment, RNC committeeman, Arizona Freedom Caucus, HB 2492, HB 2243, voter registration restrictions, citizenship verification, residency documentation, January 6 2021, Vice President Pence letter



Investigative trail pointers (public records)

Education only — verify independently. Absence of hits is not proof.

Channel Starting points
Federal courts CourtListener / PACER party and attorney searches (spelling variants)
Campaign finance FEC + OpenSecrets for committees and donors tied to documented roles
Corporate / LLC State secretary of state; OpenCorporates for cross-border shells from reporting
Sanctions / PEP OpenSanctions when international business context is already sourced
Contracts / grants USAspending.gov for named entities from investigations

Use public-records-research-specialist, corporate-intelligence-investigator, and public-corruption-ombudsman evidence tiers.


Factual correction requests: If you believe information in this profile is incorrect, please contact factcheck@patriot.university with your name (optional), the specific claim, and any supporting documentation. We review all submissions and correct verified errors promptly.

For Trump Supporters: Questions Worth Considering

Jake Hoffman signed a document claiming to be one of Arizona’s official presidential electors for Donald Trump on December 14, 2020. Joe Biden had won Arizona. Hoffman had no legal authority to claim that status. The document falsely described him and his co-signers as “duly elected and qualified Electors.” Then, on January 5, 2021 — the day before the Capitol riot — Hoffman wrote to Vice President Pence urging him to delay counting Arizona’s electoral votes to allow the legislature to “clarify” the proper electors. He did not disclose to Pence that he himself was one of the fraudulent electors he was asking Pence to consider instead.

Here’s a question worth sitting with: Hoffman’s letter to Pence specifically concealed his own conflict of interest. He wrote to the person who would be counting the votes, asking that person to count different votes — while hiding that he was one of the fake alternatives. That’s not political speech or election protest. That’s a deliberate misrepresentation to a government official during an official proceeding. If a Democratic state legislator had done exactly this to keep a Republican out of the White House, would you consider it protected political speech? Or fraud?

A second question about the Arizona Republican Party’s response: Hoffman was indicted on felony charges in April 2024. Days later, the Arizona GOP elected him national committeeman for the Republican National Committee. The same party that runs on rule-of-law messaging chose — days after the indictment — to elevate him. What message does that choice send about whether the party believes its own rule-of-law principles, or whether those principles only apply to the other side?

Sources

  • Arizona Republic: “Rep. Jake Hoffman, other Arizona Trump electors draw renewed scrutiny” (January 13, 2022)
  • Arizona Republic: “Fake elector Jake Hoffman enters not guilty plea in Maricopa County court” (June 6, 2024)
  • Arizona Republic: “Jake Hoffman, fake elector and Freedom Caucus leader, personifies conservative power” (September 13, 2023)
  • NBC News: “Arizona GOP taps ‘fake elector’ for RNC post” (April 2024)
  • Bluffton Today (AP): “Rep. Jake Hoffman asked Pence to not accept Arizona electoral votes” (February 16, 2022)
  • PolicyEngage: Legislative tracking for HB 2492 and HB 2243, Arizona 2022

Last Updated: May 11, 2026
Profile Status: Active monitoring – indicted, awaiting trial, currently serving
Next Review: Quarterly; update upon trial developments

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