PHOENIX — Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer ended months of speculation about her political future on Wednesday when she announced that she will not seek a third term in office.
The Arizona Constitution limits governors to two terms, but the Republican governor and her advisers have kept alive a scenario in which she might mount a longshot legal challenge to seek another four years in office.
Brewer completed the term of former Gov. Janet Napolitano when she took a job in President Barack Obama's administration in 2009. Brewer then won a full term in 2010. She has said in the past that there's "ambiguity" in the constitution because she hasn't served two full terms.
But she put that to rest Wednesday in suburban Phoenix as she declared "there does come a time to pass the torch of leadership."
"So, after completing this term in office, I will be doing just that," she said.
Brewer has been in the national spotlight on several occasions in her five years in office.
She signed the immigration crackdown law known as Senate Bill 1070 in 2010 and sparred with the Obama administration over health care, joining states that sued to overturn his health care law. But she then surprised last year when she embraced a signature part of that law, the expansion of Medicaid.
Last month, Brewer vetoed legislation that opponents said would have allowed businesses to discriminate against gays and that the business community rallied against.