OPINION
MICHELLE
GOLDBERG
Kyrsten Sinema Is Right. This Is Who She’s Always
Been.
Dec. 9,
2022
By Michelle
Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/09/opinion/kyrsten-sinema-independent-narcissism.html
In the
self-congratulatory video that Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona made to
announce that she was leaving the Democratic Party and becoming an independent,
she didn’t mention any disagreements with her former caucus about issues.
Instead, she framed the move as a step toward self-actualization. “Registering
as an independent, and showing up to work with the title of independent, is a
reflection of who I’ve always been,” she said.
It’s true:
This is who she’s always been. The content of Sinema’s politics has changed
over time, from Green Party progressivism to pro-corporate centrism. Her
approach to elected office as a vehicle for the refinement of the self has not.
In Sinema’s
2009 book “Unite and Conquer: How to Build Coalitions That Win — and Last,” she
described giving up shrill partisanship, which was making her unhappy, for a
vaguely New Age ethos that prized inner tranquillity. One chapter was called
“Letting Go of the Bear and Picking Up the Buddha,” with the bear representing
fear and anger. “Picking up the Buddha (becoming a super centered political
actor) makes you a stronger, more effective you,” she wrote. “To be your most
fabulous political self, you’ll need to learn to recognize the bear and learn
to let go of it in your work.”
Transcending
fear and anger is an excellent spiritual goal. But becoming a more centered and
fabulous person is a political project only when it’s directed toward aims
beyond oneself. With Sinema, it’s not remotely clear what those aims might be,
or if they exist. (Another chapter in her book is “Letting Go of Outcomes.”)
Announcing her new independent status, Sinema wrote an essay in The Arizona
Republic and gave interviews to outlets including Politico and CNN. Nowhere
have I seen her articulate substantive differences with the Democrats, aside
from her opposition to tax increases. Instead, she spoke about not fitting into
a box, being true to herself, and wanting to work, as she told Politico,
without the “pressures or the poles of a party structure.”
Until
recently, Sinema has seemed to delight in the power an evenly split Senate gave
her, which she used to benefit the financial and pharmaceutical industries.
Negotiating the Inflation Reduction Act, she single-handedly stopped Democrats
from closing the carried interest loophole, a provision that significantly cuts
the tax bills of Wall Street investors. And Sinema insisted on narrowing the
part of the law meant to bring down prescription drug prices, earning criticism
even from Joe Manchin, the centrist West Virginia Democrat with whom she is
frequently aligned.
“One of her
deep flaws is that she doesn’t realize our actions have impacts every day on
people who need our help,” said Ruben Gallego, a Democratic Arizona congressman
who’d been considering a primary campaign against Sinema.
For much of
this year, Sinema appeared to be preparing for a future in a Senate run by the
Republican Mitch McConnell. In September, at a cozy appearance with McConnell
in Kentucky, she said, “As you all know, control changes between the House and
the Senate every couple of years. It’s likely to change again in just a few
weeks.” She described McConnell as a friend, and he praised her as the “most
effective first-term senator” he’d seen in his career.
Had
Republicans won the Senate, Sinema could have become an independent who
caucused with Republicans, preserving her place in the majority. A red wave
might have seemed to vindicate her aggressive centrism, especially if Senator
Mark Kelly, an Arizona Democrat far more loyal to his party, had lost. But
Kelly won and Democrats picked up a Senate seat. That meant Sinema could no
longer hold the rest of the Democratic caucus hostage, or argue that only
Democrats who defy their base are electable in her state. She was about to become
a lot less relevant. Now she’s center stage again.
For the
immediate future, Sinema’s move is unlikely to have major national political
consequences. She has refused to directly say whether she will caucus with the
Democrats. Speaking to CNN’s Jake Tapper, she shrugged off a question about the
balance of power in the Senate, saying, “That’s kind of a D.C. thing to worry
about.” Her answer was an insult to all the Arizonans who care very much which
party controls the Senate, but it was also a deflection. Sinema ruled out
caucusing with Republicans and said she intends to keep her committee
assignments, which she can do only by aligning with Democrats. However much she
values her own uniqueness, there are no parties of one in the Senate.
The real
significance of her defection will come in 2024, when she is up for
re-election. Had she remained a Democrat, Gallego could have been a strong
primary challenger. Many of those who supported Sinema four years ago have been
enraged by the way she’s obstructed popular liberal priorities, and a recent AARP
poll found that only 37 percent of likely Democratic voters in Arizona had a
positive opinion of her.
It will be
harder for Democrats to challenge her in a general election, where a three-way
race would risk a Republican victory. But Gallego, who said he will decide on
running next year, insisted that the threat of Sinema acting as a spoiler won’t
shape his decision. “No matter what, I’m not going to base my decision off this
false threat that she’s trying to put on,” he said, arguing that she doesn’t
have enough support “to put together a coalition that will affect the
Democratic nominee.”
That might
be too optimistic — Sinema wouldn’t need to get that many swing voters to
thwart a Democrat. But he’s right that she doesn’t have a winning coalition herself.
In the AARP poll, a decisive majority of voters in every demographic group,
including independents, viewed her unfavorably. It’s one thing to be
independent on behalf of your voters. It’s another to be independent from them.
Michelle
Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several
books about politics, religion and women’s rights, and was part of a team that
won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace
sexual harassment. @michelleinbklyn


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