CONGRESS
Dems agonize over Sinema 2024
If the newly minted Arizona independent seeks
reelection, she could set up a three-way race that puts her former party in a
perilous position in a swing state.
By BURGESS
EVERETT and MARIANNE LEVINE
12/12/2022
07:29 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/12/2024-sinema-dems-senate-00073594
Democrats’
next Senate campaign chief is going to inherit a huge Kyrsten Sinema dilemma.
The Arizona
centrist’s turn to independent status is shaking up the Senate’s 2024 map just
days after Democrats closed this year’s midterm battle with a huge win in
Georgia. And Sinema isn’t the only one ramping up the pressure on the party:
Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) could soon force Democrats into tough spending
decisions as he explores a bid that could produce a brutal three-way race, if
Sinema runs again.
Though
Sinema’s switch avoids a contested Democratic primary, it opens up a nightmare
scenario for the party: With three candidates on the ballot, a GOP nominee can
capitalize on centrist and liberal divisions and win a Senate seat with a
plurality vote. Democrats are not eager to intervene at the moment, but at some
point they may have to make a call about whether to support Sinema, back
whoever wins a primary or sit out the race altogether.
Fresh off
his big win in Georgia, outgoing Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chair
Gary Peters (D-Mich.) conspicuously demurred when asked about Sinema: “At this
moment, I’m really happy to say that’s the job of the next DSCC chair.” Peters
added that he won’t return to the DSCC for a second term, despite entreaties
from his colleagues.
Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, along with Peters’ successor as campaign chief,
already has to convince Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) to
run again in 2024. Arizona promises to present a hurdle of its own no matter
what the candidate lineup looks like, challenging Democrats to keep the peace
with a liberal base that opposes Sinema while also recognizing that a divided
party may struggle to win a general election in the state.
“They’ll
have to make a call. It’ll be a tough decision, probably … the standard is, the
DSCC protects the incumbents. I don’t think that’s going to change. But it’s
not my call,” Tester, a former campaign chair himself, said on Monday. He added
that “of course” he considers Sinema a party incumbent: Maine Independent Sen.
“Angus [King] is. She caucuses with us. She’s an incumbent.”
Sinema
doesn’t quite align with King in one respect: She won’t attend caucus meetings.
Yet, by accepting her committee assignments from Democrats, the party believes
she will functionally convey a 51-seat majority with her vote for the next two
years.
That’s why
Tester sees Sinema more like King, who’s won two races against nominal
Democratic opposition. The national party has declined to run candidates
against King and attacked his GOP opponent in 2012.
Sinema’s
political persona is far more complex, though. Many progressives loathe her,
hurting her numbers among Democrats in Arizona and fueling Gallego’s potential
Senate ambitions. On the other hand, she was the state’s first Democratic
Senate victor in 30 years when she prevailed in 2018 — with support from the
DSCC. She also enjoys more cross-party appeal than most senators.
“I will
wait to answer that question until she decides what she’s going to do,” Sen.
Patty Murray (D-Wash.), a former DSCC chair and an outgoing member of the party
leadership, said of future Sinema support. “I think she’s a really good
legislator.”
Like
Murray, the White House and Schumer praised Sinema since her party switch,
keeping her on friendly terms and refusing to alienate a critical swing-state
senator. Sinema has nearly $8 million on hand and has declined to say whether
she will run for reelection.
The past
two election cycles have shown that every Senate race is crucial to building a
durable majority. And Democrats are about to enter a cycle that will find them
playing defense in three red states, on top of several more potentially
competitive races. Schumer has given no timeline on when he will make his
selection to lead DSCC, but his Democrats aren’t exactly openly lobbying for
the job.
Democrats
are “probably thinking that, while it doesn’t change much today, that Ruben
Gallego and Sinema splitting the Democratic vote and making it easier for a
Republican win … that’s a plausible scenario,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas),
a close ally of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Both Cornyn
and McConnell praised Sinema on Monday, a signal that Republicans will have
some decision-making of their own to do. Many Senate Republicans count Sinema
as a close friend, complicating decisions about how hard to try and oust her in
a battleground state that they technically don’t need to flip the chamber.
Incoming
National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Steve Daines (R-Mont.) revealed
little of his party’s plans for the Copper State. He said Republicans are
“going to keep a close eye on Arizona” and said “it’s going to be a competitive
state in 2024.” Cornyn said he’s “sure there’ll be a Republican candidate.”
Democrats
have gained momentum in Arizona in recent years as Republicans struggle to
nominate candidates who can appeal to a broader voter base. Sinema’s home-state
Democratic colleague Sen. Mark Kelly beat GOP pick Blake Masters by about 5
points in November.
During her
first term, Sinema has helped cut deals on gun safety with Cornyn as well as on
infrastructure, microchips and marriage equality with a group of centrist
colleagues. But she drew the ire of the left and favor from Republicans for
defending the filibuster and opposing some Democratic tax policies.
Kelly said
he hadn’t given “any thought” into how the DSCC should treat her potential
candidacy. And asked if she should run again, he was noncommittal but praised
working “with her to the benefit of people in Arizona and this country.” He
called questions about her 2024 race “a very hypothetical thing. Nobody’s
announced they’re running for anything in Arizona, as far as I know.”
Gallego is
keeping his options open: “We’re definitely getting support from national
Democrats if I run. I’ve already spoken to a lot of national Democratic donors.
From the senatorial campaign committee, I can never predict,” he said in the
Capitol on Monday.
And he sent
a clear signal that he expects his party to avoid Sinema.
“A campaign
like that wants to invest in someone that’s going to win,” Gallego added.
“There is no possibility of Kyrsten Sinema winning as a third-party candidate
... it would not be a very smart investment.”
Most
Democratic senators aren’t going anywhere near the topic. Sen. Elizabeth Warren
(D-Mass.) said “it’s way too early to think about” the 2024 Arizona Senate
race.” Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) said she’s “not going to speculate
or tie the hands of the future DSCC chair.” And Senate Majority Whip Dick
Durbin (D-Ill.) said he’s “not getting into Arizona politics.”
Even those
who had plenty of nice things to say about Sinema would only take it so far.
“We have
worked on a lot of deals together. Don’t always agree with her, but I think
she’s proven to be a very effective legislator,” said Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.).
As for the political questions of how Democrats might treat a Sinema candidacy,
he shut down a reporter: “I think I gave you much more than you expected to get
out of me anyway.”
Nancy Vu
contributed to this report.
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