Andy Biggs posing at AG campaign kickoff May 7, 2025. (Photo: Christy Kelly for Arizona Globe)
Robson Drops AZ Gov Bid as Biggs Unifies GOP
Lack of support for moderate proves true power of MAGA
By Holly Dietrich, February 13, 2026 3:36 pm
Karrin Taylor Robson made big political news yesterday, February 12, 2026, when she announced that she was suspending her run to become the GOP’s Gubernatorial candidate against Gov. Katie Hobbs. However, her decision looks less like a sudden collapse and more like a strategic retreat from a primary that was turning into what many political analysts were increasingly calling a “no-win squeeze play.”
At the core of Robson’s dilemma: she never fully “owned” a lane, as evidenced by her lackluster polling performance, despite her early Trump endorsement in December 2024. Robson tried to parlay that endorsement by leaning into the role of the electable, pro-business, tough-on-the-border conservative. But her brand became somewhat compromised when President Trump issued a competing endorsement of Arizona Congressman Andy Biggs, who by all accounts was the true conservative, and clear MAGA choice, in the race.
Robson’s camp had already been dealing with turbulence within the Trump-dominated party, compounded by a slew of self-inflicted errors, including reports that her aides left her campaign in 2025 amid complaints about how she was characterizing Trump’s endorsement. Both issues fed a narrative that she was unable to lock down the coalition she needed to win.
Additionally, the race was trending toward a personally and financially bruising brawl that polls increasingly showed she was unlikely to win. Public polling and outside political analysis indicated that Biggs had a strong advantage with core primary voters, and the Club for Growth’s early involvement in Biggs’ favor was widely seen as another headwind for Robson. Despite reports that she had a significant, heavily self-funded war chest, the money likely failed to resolve her fundamental trouble: a base that’s already emotionally committed to her opponent.
Her stated rationale, avoiding a divisive primary that drains resources needed in the general election, provided Robson with a graceful offramp that avoided torching relationships she may want later.
Robson’s exit has whittled the GOP primary down to a battle between two Republican Congressmen: Biggs (R-CD5) and David Schweikert (R-CD1). Biggs likely benefits most from the decluttered “Trump/MAGA champion” lane, while Schweikert offers donors and more moderate Republicans a less combustible nominee.
Democrats will likely argue that the GOP field is still defined by intraparty chaos. Still, Robson’s exit may actually help Republicans by reducing prolonged infighting and allowing the eventual nominee to pivot sooner toward Katie Hobbs and the general election. Whether that helps enough depends on who wins: a Biggs nomination could supercharge the base but risk alienating moderates; Schweikert could improve crossover appeal but may face enthusiasm gaps with the MAGA core.
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