Mylie Biggs, the daughter of Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), previously said women should not be allowed to vote or hold office, yet she has filed a statement of interest to run for state Senate.
While speaking on a podcast based in the Phoenix area, Biggs, 25, revealed she does not believe women should hold office.
“Honestly, I don’t know if I would vote for any female. I don’t know if females should be in office,” Biggs told the Matty McCurdy Program last year.
“There are a lot of really good women in office, I’m not trying to hate on anyone — like, some really good congresswomen,” Biggs added. “Yeah, I don’t think women should hold office in general. That’s my position. That’s my stance. I think women should run the home.”
Biggs is running for a state Senate seat that Senate President Warren Petersen will vacate as he is running for Arizona attorney general. Her father, Andy Biggs, is running for governor of Arizona in 2026 and previously held the state Senate seat she is running for.
On the podcast, she also claimed “modern feminism” has changed society, starting with women’s right to vote.” She joked about repealing the 19th Amendment, which gives women the right to vote, in the context of electoral maps that break down voting by demographic.
“Have you seen ones where it’s like, if women were the only ones to vote, what it would look like, and it’s literally like 80% blue. It’s like, ‘Whoa. Repeal the 19th Amendment,’” Biggs said, laughing.
“I hate a 9-to-5 schedule. I get home, and I don’t want to do anything else. Like, women aren’t built for this. I just want to be a wife. I just want to be a mom,” Biggs said.
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In a social media post announcing her candidacy, Biggs did not address these stances.
“I’ve watched so many good people in my life serve this country in the military and in public office,” she wrote. “I too seek to serve.”