Arizona hacker changed candidate photos on election results website

The Secretary of State’s Office is working with the state’s homeland security agency to investigate whether private candidate information was accessed.

Jen Fifield, Votebeat
By:
Jen Fifield, Votebeat
I cover Phoenix and Maricopa County government and politics. It's my pleasure to cover my hometown and my community. After graduating from Arizona State University's Cronkite...
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The election results page on the Secretary of State Office's website, showing the correct photos for candidates for the 7th Congressional District primary eleciton. (Screenshot of Arizona Secretary of State website)

Last Updated on November 16, 2025 by Serena Zehlius, Editor

A hacker gained access to the web portal Arizona candidates use to upload information about themselves and changed candidate profile photos that were live on the election results website, just three weeks before the special congressional primary election, Votebeat has learned.

The Secretary of State’s Office realized the system had been breached, shut down the candidate portal the week of June 23, and kept it offline for a week, according to JP Martin, an office spokesperson. Martin said officials flagged the problem upon noticing unusual activity. He said he did not know what kinds of photographs had been improperly posted, or which candidate photos were changed. 

The hacker was able to gain access to candidates’ individual profiles, where the information they upload, including candidate filings, is stored. While much of that is public information, the office is still investigating whether any private, personally identifying information was improperly accessed, Martin said.

The candidate portal is separate from the state’s voter registration and petition signature gathering systems. No voter data was accessed, Martin said.

Az secretary of state website
A screenshot of the candidate portal on the Arizona Secretary of State’s website. The office shut down the portal after a hacker gained access to the candidate profiles that feed the election results page. (Screenshot of AZ Secretary of State website)

When the office’s cybersecurity team realized that a malicious actor had gained access, Martin said, it contacted the Arizona Department of Homeland Security, the National Guard, and a private cybersecurity firm to help. All three are helping with the investigation, he said.

While the portal was down, candidates had to work with the office to submit their documents and information through workarounds. The portal now directs candidates to update their passwords, “to support ongoing cybersecurity preparedness.”

The office put out a news release about the incident on July 1, two weeks before the July 15 primary for the 7th Congressional District, explaining that the office had “detected and successfully responded to a malicious adversary” that targeted the website. It did not provide additional details publicly, but also briefed a bipartisan group of state lawmakers about the breach. 

On Tuesday, Tyler Bowyer, COO of political advocacy group Turning Point Action, criticizedSecretary of State Adrian Fontes for not providing the public with more information about what occurred. “Don’t let Fontes bury this and pretend like ‘there is nothing to see here,’” he wrote in a social media post.

Martin said that criticism is false, pointing out that the office met with a bipartisan group of lawmakers to discuss the incident and isn’t trying to hide it.

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I cover Phoenix and Maricopa County government and politics. It's my pleasure to cover my hometown and my community. After graduating from Arizona State University's Cronkite School in 2009, I moved to the D.C. area, where I first covered government and education for local papers in Maryland and then covered trends in state policy across the U.S. for Stateline, a journalism project of The Pew Charitable Trusts. In 2018, I landed a job at The Arizona Republic and came home. My work has been published in The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Guardian, The Huffington Post, PBS NewsHour and other outlets. Regional press associations in Arizona and Maryland have recognized my investigative and feature reporting, as well as my coverage of local politics and education. I was a City University of New York Ravitch Fiscal Reporting Fellow in 2015 and a National Press Foundation Paul Miller Reporting Fellow in 2017.