Santa Fe New Mexican

Former Arizona Sen. Kyl tabbed by governor to replace McCain

- By Melissa Daniels

PHOENIX — Prolonging the uncertaint­y over who will fill the late John McCain’s U.S. Senate seat, the governor of Arizona on Tuesday announced the appointmen­t of former Sen. Jon Kyl but said he has only committed to serve until the end of the year.

Kyl, a Republican who retired from the Senate in 2012 to become a lobbyist and spend more time with his family, is currently shepherdin­g President Donald Trump’s nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court. Kyl’s appointmen­t will make it possible for him to vote for the nomination.

It’s unclear what more Kyl, 76, will do in the Senate. He said he agreed to serve briefly out of a “sense of duty” and will not run for the seat in 2020, when Arizona voters will decide who fills the seat through 2022. The seat will then be up again for a full six-year term.

Gov. Doug Ducey, also a Republican, said Kyl was “the best possible person, regardless of politics” for the job, and he hopes Kyl serves past the end of the year.

If Kyl does leave the Senate after the end of the current congressio­nal term Jan. 3, Arizona’s governor can appoint another senator for the remaining year. By state law, the senator would have to be a member of the same party as the departing one, in this case the GOP.

For now, Kyl will pad Republican­s’ margin in the narrowly divided Senate. They hold a 51-49 majority but that dwindled to a single vote while McCain stayed in Arizona for much of this year being treated for the brain cancer that killed him on Aug. 25.

The GOP is hoping Kyl will be a more reliable partisan vote than McCain, whose opposition to a partial repeal of President Barrack Obama’s health care law pitched the party into turmoil last year.

Kyl is well-respected in Arizona and has been able to avoid many of the battles with activists that complicate­d McCain’s career and that of the state’s other senator, Jeff Flake, who is retiring because his feud with Trump made his re-election impossible.

Kyl’s entire career in Washington overlapped with McCain’s, and he served with the state’s senior senator for three terms before stepping down. Kyl carved out a profile as a reliable conservati­ve vote and a foreign policy expert.

McCain’s widow, Cindy, tweeted: “Jon Kyl is a dear friend of mine and John’s. It’s a great tribute to John that he is prepared to go back into public service to help the state of Arizona.”

Doug Cole, a veteran Republican consultant and former McCain aide, said Kyl was a safe pick.

“I think McCain would be very happy with the pick. Honors his legacy while putting some major horsepower for Arizona in the seat, at least for now,” he said.

An attorney, Kyl speaks in a formal, reserved manner that is a sharp contrast to President Trump, and he belongs to an older, less populist vanguard of the GOP.

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Jon Kyl

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