Nancy Barto
American politician and a Republican member of the Arizona Senate

Nancy Barto

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American politician and a Republican member of the Arizona Senate
A.K.A.
Nancy K. Barto
Gender:
Female
Work field:
Birth:
(Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA)
Residences
Phoenix, Maricopa County, Arizona, USA
Education:
Arizona State University
Arizona State University at the West campus
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Biography

Introduction

Nancy K. Barto (born in Chicago, Illinois) is an American politician and a Republican member of the Arizona House of Representatives since January 14, 2019. She previously served in the Arizona Senate representing District 15 from 2013 to 2019. Barto served consecutively in the Arizona State Legislature from January 2007 until January 10, 2011 in the Arizona House of Representatives District 7 seat, then in the Arizona Senate in the District 7 seat from January 10, 2011 until January 14, 2013.

Education

Barto attended Arizona State University and Arizona State University at the West campus.

Positions

Barto sponsored a bill to prohibit cities and counties in Arizona from banning plastic bags. SB1241, the "ban on banning bags", became law when the governor signed it on April 13, 2015.

In 2019, Barto sponsored three bills (HB2470, HB2471, HB2472) relating to childhood vaccination. HB2470 would add a non-medical religious belief exemption for childhood vaccines, and removed a signature requirement for parents. HB2471 would require doctors to inform parents about potential risks of vaccines and how to file for injury claims related to vaccines. HB2472 would require doctors to offer a blood test prior to vaccination; the test would determine if a child already possesses the antibodies that would be developed from a vaccine. Barto stated the bills were not intended to promulgate anti-vaccine policy, but rather were about expanding parental freedom and choice. Barto added "We need to look at the data, look at the science and recognize that there's research on both sides", despite warnings by public health officials that the bills would reduce immunization rates in Arizona.

Elections

2006: State Representative – District No. 7

To challenge House District 7 incumbent Republican Representatives Ray Barnes and David Smith, Barto ran in the four-way September 12, 2006 Republican Primary; Barto placed first with 7,218 votes and Representative Barnes placed second; in the five-way November 7, 2006 General election, Barto took the first seat with 29,952 votes and Representative Barnes took the second seat ahead of Democratic nominees Marilyn Fox, Jeanne Lunn, and Libertarian candidate Jim Iannuzo, who had run for a House seat in 2004.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 7,218 38.7%
 
Republican Ray Barnes 4,724 25.3%
 
Republican David Burnell Smith 4,392 23.5%
 
Republican Howard Sprague 2,331 12.5%
 
Total 18,665 100%

† Won nomination for general election

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 29,952 29.7%
 
Republican Ray Barnes 27,897 27.7%
 
Democratic Marilyn Fox 21,143 21.0%
 
Democratic Jeanne Lunn 2,331 19.5%
 
Libertarian Jim Iannuzo 2,128 2.1%
 
Total 100,721 100%

2008: State Representative – District No. 7

Barto, Republican Representative Barnes, Democratic nominee Jeanne Lunn, and Libertarian candidate Jim Iannuzo were unopposed for their September 2, 2008 primaries, setting up a rematch; in the four-way November 4, 2008 General election, Barto took the first seat with 46,854 votes and Representative Barnes took the second seat ahead of Democratic nominee Jeanne Lunn and Libertarian candidate Jim Iannuzo.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 46,854 36.6%
 
Republican Ray Barnes 40,471 31.6%
 
Democratic Jeanne Lunn 31,753 24.8%
 
Libertarian Jim Iannuzo 8,966 7.0%
 
Total 128,044 100%

2010: State Senator – District No. 7

When Republican Senator Jim Waring ran for Phoenix City Council and left the Senate District 7 seat open, Barto and Representative Barnes both ran in the four-way August 24, 2010 Republican Primary, where Barto placed first with 10,475 votes (46.2%); in the November 2, 2010 General election, winning with 41,849 votes (67.2%) against Democratic nominee Eric Shelley.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 10,475 46.2%
 
Republican Ray Barnes 7,461 32.8%
 
Republican Bob Green 3,254 14.3%
 
Republican Brad Buch 1,503 6.6%
 
Total 22,693 100%

† Won nomination for general election

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 41,849 67.2%
 
Democratic Eric Shelley 20,441 32.8%
 
Total 62,290 100%

2012: State Senator – District No. 15

Redistricted to District 15, Barto was unopposed for the August 28, 2012 Republican Primary, winning with 19,162 votes, and won the November 6, 2012 General election with 58,283 votes (73.2%) against Libertarian nominee Dennis Grenier.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 58,213 73.1%
 
Libertarian Dennis Grenier 21,384 26.9%
 
Total 79,597 100%

2014: State Senator – District No. 15

Barto defeated David Ryan in the primary, then ran unopposed in the general election.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 13,585 62.9%
 
Republican David Ryan 8,012 37.1%
 
Total 21,597 100%

† Won nomination for general election

2016: State Senator – District No. 15

Barto ran unopposed in the primary, then defeated the Democratic candidate, Tonya MacBeth, in the general election.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 62,691 63.3%
 
Democratic Tonya K MacBeth 36,414 36.7%
 
Total 99,105 100%

2018: State Representative – District No. 15

Barto and John Allen ran unopposed in the primary, then both defeated the Democratic candidates, Julie Gunnigle and Jennifer Samuels, in the general election.

Party Candidate Votes Percentage
Republican Nancy Barto 51,305 29.1%
 
Republican John Allen 49,279 27.9%
 
Democratic Jennifer Samuels 38,565 21.9%
 
Democratic Julie Gunnigle 37,308 21.1%
 
Total 176,457 100%