The Arizona Republic

Sinema will seek Flake seat in Senate

Dem is seen as bipartisan and skilled at fundraisin­g

- RONALD J. HANSEN THE REPUBLIC | AZCENTRAL.COM

U.S. Rep. Kyrsten Sinema is running for the Senate seat held by Jeff Flake, ending months of speculatio­n about her political future and giving Democrats a top-tier fundraiser with experience on Capitol Hill.

In a video announcing her bid, the Arizona Democrat recounts her upbringing in a family that fell from the middle class into homelessne­ss. She made her way to Congress, Sinema says, with hard work and help from “family, church and, sometimes, even the government.”

“I really feel like I have a duty to serve and give back to this country, which has given so much to me,” she said in an interview with The Arizona Republic. “Working hard is all I know;

it’s who I am. I believe I’ll be the hardest worker for Arizonans in the United States Senate.”

Sinema, who has a reputation as an energetic problem-solver not focused on partisansh­ip, said she intends to make her work on behalf of veterans and cutting regulatory red tape for businesses core issues of her campaign.

“Our nation is facing a lot of problems right now, but we can fix these problems if we work together,” Sinema says in the video. “It’s time to put our country ahead of party, ahead of politics. It’s time to stop fighting and look for common ground.”

The announceme­nt echoes her frequent lament that “Washington is broken.” But she also brings a relatively slender list of legislativ­e accomplish­ments in Congress, where gridlock has dominated since Sinema first won her House seat in 2012.

She has set her sights on unseating Flake, who is already battling former state Sen. Kelli Ward for the Republican nomination and trailing the GOP challenger in recent polls. But before that, Sinema faces attorney and community activist Deedra Abboud, as well as political unknowns Jim Moss of Globe and Richard Sherzan of Mesa, in the race for the Democratic nomination.

Arizona Democrats, who haven’t won a Senate race since 1988, will have to choose between candidates like Abboud, a novice who embraces progressiv­e policies, and Sinema, who has won three terms in the House in part by working with Republican­s.

Democrats nationally see Flake’s seat as a key opportunit­y in an otherwise dreary Senate map for the left in 2018.

Sinema is among the top fundraiser­s in the House, adding new financial pressure to Flake.

With Sinema vacating her congressio­nal seat, the 9th District is expected to see more Republican­s pursuing a seat that is considered competitiv­e on paper but has been hers alone since it was created.

One recent poll suggests she could win the Senate seat. Phoenix Republican consulting firm HighGround Public Affairs found Ward leading Flake by 14 percentage points in the GOP primary and Sinema leading Flake by 8 percentage points in a general-election matchup.

It’s a political squeeze similar to the one Sen. John McCain faced in 2015, when he battled Ward to his right and then-U.S. Rep. Ann Kirkpatric­k, another moderate Democrat, whom he soundly defeated last year.

So far this year, Sinema has voted in line with the Trump administra­tion’s known preference­s 49 percent of the time, according to the website FiveThirty­Eight. By that measure, she is the third-most GOP-friendly Democrat so far this year.

By contrast, Flake has voted with the administra­tion 92 percent of the time. Seven of the 51 other Republican­s in the Senate, including McCain, have lower marks.

Sinema’s proudest legislativ­e accomplish­ment to date is passage last year of a measure to require the VA to accommodat­e veterans needing mental-health assistance, even if their work involved classified informatio­n that needs special handling. It is named for Daniel Somers, a Phoenix Iraq War veteran who killed himself after saying he was hitting roadblocks with the VA.

Some Democrats have complained that Sinema has been too eager to support law-enforcemen­t bills that would make life more difficult for immigrants. At the same time, she has been outspoken in her support of “dreamers,” immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

While Sinema has frequently supported the current GOP agenda, she did not vote for the health-care reforms that are arguably the most divisive and high-profile legislatio­n of the Trump era.

Sinema has made reforms for the VA hospitals and improved economic opportunit­ies for those with military ties a centerpiec­e of her time in Congress, though the hospital system remains in a state of upheaval three years after The Arizona Republic uncovered widespread problems in Phoenix.

Earlier this month, Sinema met with President Donald Trump as part of a bipartisan group of House moderates seeking common ground on issues that included accommodat­ing “dreamers,” enacting temporary measures to stabilize the Affordable Care Act, and sweeping tax changes.

Such bipartisan meetings have become a rarity in Washington, and Sinema’s presence speaks to her reputation as a Democrat whom Republican­s can work with.

Sinema this year co-sponsored a bill to better connect business startups with investors by cutting regulatory requiremen­ts. That measure is pending in the Senate. A member of the House Financial Services Committee, she is generally supportive of cutting taxes and of the kind of public-private infrastruc­ture plan sketched out by the Trump administra­tion, though she also cites concerns about the government’s growing national debt.

Sinema has occasional­ly frustrated Democrats with what she sees as a need for moderation. She has declined to vote for Nancy Pelosi as her party’s leader in the House. She also skipped a Tempe rally for Hillary Clinton at the end of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

She is friendly with Republican­s in the House, including Arizonans like former Rep. Matt Salmon and his successor, Rep. Andy Biggs, both of whom are among the most conservati­ve members of the GOP.

Sinema frequently co-sponsors Republican bills, enough to make her the third-most bipartisan member of the House and the fourth-most conservati­ve Democrat in the Congress that ended in 2016, according to GovTrack, a nonpartisa­n organizati­on that monitors congressio­nal activity. She was near the bottom of House sophomores at attracting influentia­l co-sponsors to her own bills, GovTrack found.

Sinema’s bipartisan­ship extends to social media, where she routinely passes along birthday wishes to colleagues in both parties.

One thing that is not expected to be a problem for Sinema is money.

She is one of the more prolific fundraiser­s in Washington. Through June, she had amassed $3.2 million in campaign cash, which was one of the largest sums in the House and topped the $3 million that Flake had raised by then.

Her fundraisin­g at least briefly posed a problem earlier this year, when The Republic noted that she accepted contributi­ons from the embattled founders of Backpage.com, a website accused of knowingly accepting ads offering sex with underage girls.

Sinema eventually gave the money, about $53,000, to a charity to combat sexual abuse, but only after other charities rejected what they viewed as tainted cash.

Flake and McCain helped keep pressure on Backpage this summer by introducin­g a bill to make it easier to prosecute online publishers aiding in sex traffickin­g.

“It’s time to put our country ahead of party, ahead of politics.” REP. KYRSTEN SINEMA IN A VIDEO ANNOUNCING HER BID FOR U.S. SENATE

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