Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP will seek unity after bitter Senate primary

Republican mega-donors will lead fundraisin­g event in Milwaukee Aug. 17

- Bill Glauber

As Republican U.S. Senate hopefuls Leah Vukmir and Kevin Nicholson engage in an increasing­ly bitter primary, plans are underway to unify the GOP for the fall campaign against Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin.

And it turns out, two GOP mega-donors will be part of the truce, according to a report by Right Wisconsin.

Beloit billionair­e Diane Hendricks, who backs Vukmir, and Illinois businessma­n Richard Uihlein, who supports Nicholson, will serve as “event chairs” for a fundraisin­g event in Milwaukee on Aug. 17 — three days after the primary.

Details on the fundraiser are still taking shape.

The dinner will include honorary guests Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson and U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.), who heads up the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Tickets start at $1,000 per person.

Republican­s are trying to avoid what happened in 2012, when former Gov. Tommy Thompson emerged from a long, expensive primary, and was beaten by Baldwin.

With the way the VukmirNich­olson race is going, there may be plenty of fence mending to be done.

Both candidates have been hit with negative advertisin­g from outside groups funded by Hendricks, chairman of ABC Supply Co., and Uihlein. a Lake Forest, Illinois, resident who is a founder of the Pleasant Prairiebas­ed Uline company

Wisconsin Next PAC, a pro-Vukmir group funded by Hendricks and others, hit Nicholson for his past support for abortion rights while he was president of the College Democrats of America.

Club for Growth Action Wisconsin countered with an ad that attacked Vukmir as a shady career politician. The group’s sole financial backer is Uihlein.

On Tuesday, Vukmir picked up a key endorsemen­t from the National Rifle Associatio­n Political Victory Fund.

Chris W. Cox, chairman of NRA-PVF, said: “Vukmir’s record demonstrat­es her strong support for our Second Amendment freedoms and hunting heritage. We can count on Leah Vukmir to strongly support our right to keep and bear arms in the U.S. Senate.”

Also this week, Nicholson weighed in on Fox News in an online post and on-air appearance about his conversion from being a college Democrat to a conservati­ve Republican.

His online written piece ran under the provocativ­e headline: “I’m running for Senate as a Republican. My Democrat parents are so furious they’re backing my opponent.”

Nicholson’s parents contribute­d to Baldwin’s campaign.

Nicholson wrote: “While my choice (to become a conservati­ve Republican) was made clear to me through the experience of my marriage, the birth of my three children, my acceptance of Jesus Christ as my savior, my time fighting in two wars, and my experience in business since leaving the Marine Corps, it came at personal cost.

“My parents have since turned their back on me, my wife, their grandchild­ren, and their extended family. Adding to this, they decided to make the maximum contributi­on to my Democrat opponent in my campaign for U.S. Senate in Wisconsin, an intentiona­l personal blow that made headlines across the country. It was deliberate — and it is a true representa­tion of the intoleranc­e of a political philosophy that stands on the false platform of tolerance.”

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Vukmir
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Nicholson

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