The Denver Post

Gardner at wheel of fund machine

At 43, Coloradan is youngest lawmaker in years on hot seat

- By Mark K. Matthews

At age 43, U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado is the youngest lawmaker in a generation to lead the national fundraisin­g machine dedicated to expanding Republican ranks in the Senate.

Not so long ago, it was the kind of job an ambitious politician could use as a steppingst­one to something more — and, in Gardner’s case, it still could.

But things are looking rough right now.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee has seen a recent plunge in fundraisin­g, driven by what many donors see as the party’s stymied agenda in Congress.

Potentiall­y more troublesom­e is the civil war between party leaders and Republican­s aligned with former White House adviser Steve Bannon. This rift has already drawn the committee into an Alabama primary election in which it first backed the unsuccessf­ul establishm­ent candidate and later the far-right insurgent — and eventual nominee — Roy Moore.

The shift in support risks attacks from both a vocal faction of Republican­s as well as Democrats eager to tie the NRSC to candidates such as Moore, who once wrote that U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, a Minnesota Democrat and Muslim, shouldn’t be allowed to serve in Congress because of his religion.

Taken together, Gardner should expect to walk a tightrope for the rest of his two-year term, said one political observer who described some Republican­s as “in open revolt.”

“There isn’t a lot of love lost with the political establishm­ent, particular­ly on the Republican side,” said Nathan Gonzales, editor and publisher of the nonpartisa­n political analyst group Inside Elections, “and that’s something the chairman is going to have to continue to navigate.”

Stymied fundraisin­g

The most outward sign of trouble for the NRSC is its recent fundraisin­g.

After a fast start to the year, the group has seen a sharp drop in contributi­ons. In September, the NRSC raised just $2.2 million, compared with $4.5 million collected by the rival Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

That comparison is not an outlier either. The DSCC has dwarfed the NRSC the past three months: $11.5 million to $6.3 million.

The low totals are especially pronounced given that in March the NRSC broke its own monthly record for a nonelectio­n year by snagging a whopping $7 million in contributi­ons.

The early edge is why the NRSC isn’t panicking — yet — as it says overall fundraisin­g for 2017 is ahead of past nonelectio­n years.

But the recent drop hasn’t gone unnoticed.

As reported by The New York Times, Gardner told his Repub- lican colleagues in September that the lack of a major legislativ­e win, such as a repeal of the Affordable Care Act, had infuriated the Republican donor base.

He indicated as much in a recent interview.

“I think people are anxious for Congress to get its work done,” Gardner said. “People expect the majority to accomplish the things they said they would. That means you pass legislatio­n on tax reform that grows the economy (and) you continue to work on escalating health care costs.”

Republican­s in Colorado and Washington both said the GOP has a lot riding on its latest push — a bid to overhaul the tax code — and that the effort could make or break its ability to maintain its slim, 52-seat majority in the 100-member Senate.

“There is no question there’s frustratio­n among some of our supporters with the health care vote,” said Republican U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who serves as vice chair of the NRSC. “I mean, the primary reason to do tax reform is because of the economic gain that we’ll get. The other compelling reason is we have to prove that we’re a governing majority and we can produce a result.”

The constant pressure from party donors isn’t unique to the GOP or Gardner. Democratic U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado, who led the DSCC for the 2014 election cycle, recalled a similar vibe.

“A huge part of that job is fundraisin­g and a huge part of that job is being on the phone,” he said. “In all of these instances, people are very interested in giving you their opinion on the direction of the party. Virtually every call is someone telling you what they think.”

Democrats lost control of the Senate the year Bennet chaired the DSCC — with one of those losses coming in his home state of Colorado with Gardner’s defeat of then-u.s. Sen. Mark Udall.

But Bennet was spared much of the blame and won his own re-election in 2016.

“In my experience, (party) chairmen don’t often get held responsibl­e for the outcome of elections,” said Jennifer Duffy of the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report.

She said she didn’t see that for Bennet and that it probably would be the same for Gardner.

Gardner also benefits from a Senate map that favors the GOP — in that many more Democrats are up for re-election in 2018. That means the NRSC has fewer states to defend and more opportunit­ies to go on offense.

Ultimately, Gardner’s new Nrsc-generated relationsh­ips with Republican donors and colleagues could help his career in the long term. Former Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and current Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell both once served as NRSC chairs.

Working around unrest

But Gardner is battling more than just Democrats this cycle.

He also has to contend with opposition from within his own party — the face of which is Bannon, a former adviser to President Donald Trump and provocateu­r with the right-wing Breitbart News Network.

Bannon got behind Moore in Alabama — beating the NRSC and Republican incumbent Luther Strange in the process — and he has threatened to support primary challenges against senators he deems as part of the establishm­ent.

As the NRSC is bound to protect its incumbents, similar intraparty clashes are likely in states such as Mississipp­i and Nevada, where Bannon-aligned Republican­s are looking to unseat U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker — a former NRSC chair — and U.S. Sen. Dean Heller, respective­ly.

This type of family fight isn’t new, said Dick Wadhams, former chair of the Colorado Republican Party. But past years “didn’t have the intensity of what we are seeing in 2017,” he said.

So far, Gardner has avoided much of the criticism Bannon and his allies have directed at more senior leaders such as Mcconnell.

And Gardner has the backing of GOP lawmakers who have clashed with Trump, notably outgoing U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona. “This is a tough time and there are divisions in the party and to have someone like Cory who’s optimistic, who gets along with everybody (and) and who presents a good face — that’s as good for the party as we can get,” Flake said.

Gardner’s armistice with his fellow Republican­s, however, has elicited criticism from Democrats back in Colorado — notably as it relates to Moore.

The former judge strongly opposes gay rights and marriage, has questioned the U.S. citizenshi­p of former President Barack Obama and has made the baseless claim that there are Midwest communitie­s living under Muslim Sharia law.

After Moore’s primary win, Gardner said in a statement that the NRSC would support him and that Moore was “imperative to passing a conservati­ve agenda.”

To that end, the NRSC recently was one of several groups to open a joint fundraisin­g account with Moore’s campaign — although it’s uncertain how much the NRSC ultimately will have to spend to try to keep Alabama in Republican hands.

The moves stand in contrast to Flake and U.S. Sen. Ben Sasse, R-neb., who have criticized Moore, notably over his remarks on Islam.

Morgan Carroll, who chairs the Colorado Democratic Party, said Gardner now bears culpabilit­y for Moore. “It is fictitious to pretend that Cory Gardner as a person is different than what’s coming out of the NRSC,” Carroll said.

The Denver Post asked Gardner what he thought of some of Moore’s views and asked him to identify any he took exception to.

Gardner would not name examples but said he would “make it clear where I agree and disagree with anyone — and I have done that over the past many years — and I will continue to do that going forward.”

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