Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kochs won’t back N.D. candidate

Say Republican no better than foe in Senate race

- By Steve Peoples The Associated Press

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The conservati­ve Koch brothers’ network declared Monday that it will not help elect the Republican Senate candidate in North Dakota, turning its back on the GOP in a marquee election — at least for now — after determinin­g that the Republican challenger is no better than the Democratic incumbent.

The decision sends a message to Republican officials across the country that there may be consequenc­es for those unwilling to oppose the spending explosion and protection­ist trade policies embraced by the Trump White House in recent weeks. And little more than three months before Election Day, it leaves a top-tier Republican Senate campaign without the assistance of one of the conservati­ve movement’s most powerful allies as their party fights to maintain control of Congress.

“For those who stand in the way, we don’t pull any punches, regardless of party,” Tim Phillips, who leads the Kochs’ political arm, told hundreds of donors while outlining their midterm election strategy on the final day of a three-day private Rocky Mountain retreat.

The Kochs’ political arm, Americans for Prosperity, still plans to focus its resources on helping Republican Senate candidates in Tennessee, Florida and Wisconsin. It remains unclear how hard the group will work to defeat vulnerable Senate Democrats in West Virginia, Missouri and Montana.

The midterm strategy could change in the coming weeks, but the Kochs currently plan to ignore North Dakota’s high-profile Senate contest, where three-term Republican Congressma­n Kevin Cramer is trying to unseat Democratic Sen. Heidi Heitkamp. She’s considered among the most vulnerable Senate Democrats in the nation.

“He’s not leading on the issues this country needs leadership most right now,” Phillips said of Cramer, citing spending and trade. “If Cramer doesn’t step up to lead, that makes it hard to support him.”

Ahead of the announceme­nt, Charles Koch told reporters he cared little for party affiliatio­n and regretted supporting some Republican­s in the past who only paid lip service to conservati­ve principles.

Network leaders over the weekend repeatedly lashed out at the Republican-backed $1.3 trillion spending bill adopted in March.

Following Monday’s announceme­nt, Julia Krieger, a Heitkamp campaign spokespers­on, said, “When it comes to leading on the pocketbook issues North Dakotans care about — from strong trade markets to responsibl­e spending and cutting red tape for North Dakota businesses — Heidi has always been consistent: North Dakota comes first.”

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Kevin Cramer

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