The Mercury News

Pick to replace McCain a political balancing act

- By Melissa Daniels and Nicholas Riccardi

PHOENIX » Sen. John McCain’s death in office has handed Arizona’s governor an empty Senate seat to give out — and a difficult political puzzle to solve before he does.

Arizona law requires only that Gov. Doug Ducey name a replacemen­t who is a member of McCain’s Republican party and who will fill the seat until the next general election in 2020. But in a state with a deeply divided Republican Party, where McCain was a towering but divisive figure, the choice is far more complicate­d.

Ducey is balancing the demands of the many conservati­ve Arizona Republican­s who have soured on McCain due to his dovish immigratio­n stance, criticism of President Trump and vote against a rollback of President Obama’s health care law. They are wary of Ducey appointing a moderate. But naming someone with dramatical­ly different views from McCain could be viewed as disrespect­ful to McCain’s legacy, carrying its own risks. In either case, Ducey wants to set the party up to hold the seat two years from now, no easy task given the turmoil

in his party.

The decision is under close scrutiny in Washington. While McCain has been treated for cancer in Arizona and unable to vote in Washington, his party’s already narrow Senate majority had shrunk from two votes to one. With the confirmati­on of Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, scheduled for next month the GOP needs every reliable vote it can get. Ducey’s office has heard from Vice President

Mike Pence’s aides about the choice, a person familiar with the discussion­s said Sunday. The person was not authorized to discuss the matter and asked for anonymity.

A day after McCain’s death, political types from Arizona to Washington were buzzing with options. The senator’s wife, Cindy McCain, was viewed as a possibilit­y, as was former Sen. John Kyl and former McCain chief of staff, Grant Woods. Another group of

former lawmakers and state officials were floated as middle-ground options — including Ducey’s chief of staff Kirk Adams — who might not anger the right wing of the party.

Ducey himself faces a weak primary challenge from his right in the state’s primary elections Tuesday, and spokesman Daniel Ruiz said on Sunday that the appointmen­t will not be made until after McCain’s funeral, which will likely be next week.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? As flags fly at half-staff at the Arizona Capitol in memory of the late Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, television crews broadcast live Sunday in Phoenix.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As flags fly at half-staff at the Arizona Capitol in memory of the late Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain, television crews broadcast live Sunday in Phoenix.

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