Sheriff Joe Arpaio is headed for a staggering defeat in his bid for a seventh term at top law enforcement officer in Maricopa County, Arizona, according to a new poll Thursday that shows him trailing his Democratic challenger by 15 percentage points.
Paul Penzone, the Democrat, has 45.9 percent support while Sheriff Arpaio has 31.1 percent in the poll by Arizona State University and the Arizona Republic.
Those numbers show Sheriff Arpaio attracting support of less than a third of voters, signaling he’d need a monumental comeback to win the race.
The poll was conducted at the same time that the federal Justice Department announced it was pursuing criminal contempt charges against the sheriff, saying he has refused to comply with court orders that he stop profiling Hispanics in his jurisdiction.
Sheriff Arpaio has gained national notoriety over the years for his tough stance on illegal immigrants and his creative law enforcement, including having inmates put in tent city jails and wear pink jumpsuits.
This year, the sheriff has been one of the most vocal backers of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, and both men have become targets for the growing Latino community, which is eager to flex its political muscle.
In 2012, Sheriff Arpaio won his sixth term in a three-way race that also featured Mr. Penzone, a former police officer in Phoenix, as the Democratic challenger. The sheriff managed to crack the majority mark in that race, collecting 50.7 percent of the vote.
• Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.
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