East Bay Times

MAGA attack on Daniels an early GOP alarm bell

- By Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen is a Washington Post columnist.

Here we go again. In 2022, Republican­s blew a historic opportunit­y to take back the Senate because, in state after state, they nominated extreme candidates whose only qualificat­ion was fealty to former president Donald Trump.

While positive, forwardloo­king conservati­ve reformers such as Govs. Ron DeSantis (Florida), Mike DeWine (Ohio), Chris Sununu (New Hampshire) and Brian Kemp (Georgia) trounced their Democratic opponents, MAGA Senate candidates including Herschel Walker (Georgia), Mehmet Oz (Pennsylvan­ia), Don Bolduc (New Hampshire) and Blake Masters (Arizona) lost winnable races. Voters' message could not have been clearer.

So, Republican­s learned their lesson, right? Apparently not.

When former Indiana Republican governor Mitch Daniels announced he was exploring a 2024 bid to succeed Sen. Mike Braun (R), who is running for governor, Republican­s should have been elated. Daniels was a whirlwind of reform in the governor's mansion. He ended collective bargaining for state employees, establishe­d one of the country's largest school choice program for low-income students and created a conservati­ve alternativ­e to Medicaid that gave citizens more control over choices. He inherited a $700 million deficit but left the state with a $2 billion budget surplus — achieved while he implemente­d the biggest tax cut in Indiana history. Then, as president of Purdue University, he earned a reputation as the United States' most innovative college president. Daniels rejected vaccine mandates and COVID lockdowns, replaced full-time dining hall employees with student workers, scrapped the vast fleet of university-owned buses in favor of a private contractor and froze tuition for 10 years.

In other words, Daniels is exactly the kind of bold, thoughtful conservati­ve reformer voters flocked to in 2022. And he was well positioned to win the GOP nomination. A December poll showed him leading Rep. Jim Banks — a Trump loyalist who voted against certifying Joe Biden's election — by 22 points.

Then came the RINO hunters. The Club for Growth released an ad excoriatin­g Daniels as a taxand-spend “old-guard Republican clinging to the old ways of the bad old days.” Donald Trump Jr. tweeted “The establishm­ent is trying to recruit weak RINO Mitch Daniels” to run for Senate, adding that “he would be Mitt Romney 2.0.”

It worked. Daniels decided that life is too short to spend the next two years fending off attacks and distortion­s of his record from the right. He opted not to run.

In 2024, Democrats will be defending 23 seats, including three in Trumpwon states (Montana, Ohio and West Virginia) and five (Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia, Wisconsin) that Biden won by five points or less. Meanwhile, Republican­s will be defending 10 seats, none of which are in Biden-won states and one (Florida) in a state where DeSantis won reelection by nearly 20 points last year. The Senate is the GOP's for the taking in 2024 — provided Republican­s learn from their 2022 mistakes.

In Arizona, two 2022 losers, Masters and Trumpbacke­d gubernator­ial candidate Kari Lake, are reportedly considerin­g Senate runs.

In Michigan, former congressma­n Peter Meijer would be a strong Senate candidate — but he was targeted by Trump in last year's GOP primary. Meijer lost the nomination to Trump-backed John Gibbs, who went on to lose a perfectly winnable GOP House seat.

The new chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Sen. Steve Daines (Montana), is wisely not leaving things to chance (in contrast to his disastrous predecesso­r, Sen. Rick Scott of Florida) and has pledged to get involved in contested primaries. “Republican­s are sick of losing,” Daines says. “We want to make sure we have candidates that can win general elections.”

As 2022 showed, losing just a couple of winnable races is all it takes to cost Republican­s the Senate majority. The GOP needs candidates who can win general elections — candidates such as Mitch Daniels.

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