Call & Times

Primaries prove unkind to GOP House members seeking higher office

- By SAHIL KAPUR

Republican voters are favoring local officials and political outsiders over Washington veterans on primary ballots this year, dealing defeats to several House lawmakers trying to move on to higher offices.

Rep. Raul Labrador of Idaho on Tuesday became the latest Republican incumbent to lose out. Although he was elected to four terms in the House, GOP voters rejected Labrador’s bid to become the party’s nominee for governor in the state, giving it instead to Lt. Gov. Brad Little.

Labrador’s defeat came one week after Republican voters in three states made similar choices.

West Virginia Rep. Evan Jenkins lost a primary for the U.S. Senate race to state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey. Indiana Reps. Luke Messer and Todd Rokita lost a threeway contest to Mike Braun, a businessma­n and former state legislator. And in North Carolina, Rep. Robert Pittenger lost his House primary – a rare occurrence for an incumbent seeking renominati­on – to Baptist pastor Mark Harris, who labeled Pittenger as insufficie­ntly conservati­ve.

A common thread in the Senate campaigns: all the candidates competed to show they were most closely aligned with President Donald Trump, who won office portraying himself as a political outsider.

“The ‘outsider’ appeal we saw hit paydirt in 2016 is still very real, and when given a choice, it’s no surprise that a plurality of Republican­s are drawn to an anti-Washington message,” said Liam Donovan, a lobbyist and former staff member with the Senate GOP’s campaign arm.

He said in an email that the phenomenon “does reflect the root of the president’s appeal, if not a doubling down on the same impulse.”

Voters haven’t rejected House veterans across the board. Rep. Lou Barletta won a Pennsylvan­ia Senate primary on Tuesday, while Rep. Jim Renacci won a Senate primary in Ohio last week. But neither of them faced competitiv­e primaries and both won the early endorsemen­t from Trump, who remains popular among GOP voters.

“Being in the House used to be a good launching pad to the Senate or the governor’s office. This cycle it appears to be a major liability,” said Jennifer Duffy, who tracks Senate and governor’s races for the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report. “It could be as simple as Congress is unpopular and voters don’t believe that these candidates deserve a promotion.”

Numerous polls taken over the last month show that almost three-quarters of Americans disapprove of the job Congress is doing. A Monmouth University poll conducted in late April showed Congress’s approval rating at 17 percent.

The House members who’ve been defeated span the ideologica­l spectrum from mainstream Republican­s like Jenkins, to outspoken ideologues like Rokita, to Labrador, who in 2015 co-founded the House Freedom Caucus, a group of rabble-rousing conservati­ves that led the push to depose former Speaker John Boehner and seeks to pull GOP leaders to the right.

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