The Palm Beach Post

Baer’s Furniture family member seeks Mast’s seat

Meanwhile potential candidate Aronberg says he has no interest.

- By Wayne Washington Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Lauren Baer has jumped into the fight to unseat U.S. Rep. Brian Mast in Florida’s District 18, the Treasure Coast-north Palm Beach County district that is expected to be one of the most competitiv­e congressio­nal races in the country next year.

Baer, an attorney and Palm Beach Gardens native, served as a senior policy adviser to former U.S. Secretarie­s of State Hillary Clinton and John Kerry. She was also a senior policy adviser to Samantha Power, who was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations during the Obama administra­tion.

Baer’s extended family owns and operates Baer’s Furniture, which has been doing business in South Florida for more than seven decades. Her entry into the race comes as another would-be candidate, Palm Beach State Attorney Dave Aronberg, ended speculatio­n that he might be induced to challenge Mast.

“I’m focused on the opioid epidemic and a number of import-

ant issues as State Attorney, and so I have no intention of running for any other office in 2018,” Aronberg told The Palm Beach Post.

Baer is the second Democrat in the race against Mast, a Republican from Palm City.

She joins Pam Keith, a U.S. Navy veteran and attorney who made an unsuccessf­ul run to win her party’s nomination for U.S. Senate last year. Keith lost the Democratic primary for the Senate seat to Mast’s predecesso­r in District 18, Patrick Murphy, who mounted his own unsuccessf­ul quest to defeat U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio.

Murphy, who is serving as a fellow at Georgetown University’s Institute of Policy and Public Service this fall, praised Baer on Monday while taking a shot at Keith, a black woman who once described him as “a millionair­e, ex-Republican white dude.”

“A lot of Democrats will be excited to see Lauren in this race,” Murphy said. “She has impressive foreign policy credential­s and deep ties to the district. Pam Keith has turned off a lot of people with her negative approach to politics.”

Keith did not fire back, saying: “I will always admire and respect Patrick’s service to this district. I volunteere­d for, and supported him when he was my Congressma­n. While he and I had a spirited primary battle last year, I am proud to have never engaged in baseless mud-slinging against him or Alan Grayson.”

Keith said voters in District 18 “are extremely excited to have a passionate advocate for our values, who is not afraid to confront the absurditie­s of the current administra­tion. The voters will decide which candidate best represents their voice in D.C., and I sincerely look forward to making the case that I am she. After all, the goal is not to pick the least offensive candidate. The goal is to pick the candidate most able to engage, excite and energize voters to defeat Brian Mast.”

Baer told The Palm Beach Post on Monday that she wants to be that candidate.

If she wins the seat, Baer would make history as the first woman to be in a samesex marriage while also serving in Congress. U.S. Rep. Barney Frank of Massachuse­tts was the first member of Congress to be in a samesex marriage.

Baer is married to Emily Myers, an attorney who worked in the enforcemen­t division of the Federal Election Commission. The couple has a baby daughter, Serena, whom Baer referenced in explaining why she wants to win a seat in Congress.

“I am not running as a gay candidate,” Baer said. “I’m running as a candidate who is gay. We share the same values as other folks, have the same concerns for our daughter as other folks have for their children.”

Those concerns, Baer said, center on making sure district residents have a strong economy, a healthy environmen­t and affordable health care.

Mast has pushed to repeal the Affordable Care Act, voting earlier this year for repeal legislatio­n that critics say would leave more Americans without health care and empower insurance companies to charge people more if they have pre-existing medical conditions.

Like other Republican­s, Mast has argued that ACA, frequently referred to as Obamacare, isn’t working, has raised insurance premiums and is limiting access to health care. Many of Mast’s constituen­ts have disagreed with that assessment, packing town hall meetings to excoriate him for backing repeal legislatio­n.

Baer, noting her mother’s health problems in the wake of a 1992 car accident, described Mast’s vote as “cruel.”

Republican repeal efforts, she said, “appear to just be slap dash efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act at any cost. I don’t think it’s right to play with the lives of Americans to score political points.”

Unlike others in his party, who simply stopped having town hall meetings when it became clear they’d face angry voters, Mast hasn’t shied away from such meetings. Nor has he wavered in his support for President Trump, whom Democrats thought would weigh down the prospects of members of Congress like Mast.

Democrats tried to link Trump to Mast last year, but the strategy didn’t work. Mast, a U.S. Army veteran who lost both legs during an explosion in Afghanista­n, defeated a wealthy businessma­n, Randy Perkins, to capture the District 18 seat.

Mast’s spokesman, Brad Stewart, said the congressma­n is not yet focused on the race.

“Congressma­n Mast’s focus is on working to serve the people in our community, including hurricane recovery efforts and preventing harmful algal blooms, not on partisan politics and elections that are over a year away,” Stewart said.

Money will likely be a big factor in the race. An FEC quarterly filing period ended on Sept. 30, but the candidates have not tallied their contributi­ons.

Mast has been relied upon to help raise money for fellow Republican­s, previewing what is expected to be a strength of his campaign. Keith said her campaign haul so far is “well into the six figures.”

“We’re very pleased,” she said.

Baer’s campaign said she has raised more than $250,000, including more than $200,000 since her official filing as a candidate on Sept. 12.

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