USA TODAY International Edition

Flake is trying to have it both ways

- Kelli Ward Kelli Ward, a family physician and former Arizona state senator, is opposing Sen. Jeff Flake in the GOP primary.

Jeff Flake’s book, Conscience of a Conservati­ve, is the latest example of the blind Trump hatred emanating from a small group of self- righteous “Republican­s” who join the radical left in an effort to delegitimi­ze the president.

Flake and his fellow elitists in Washington, D. C., think that President Trump is the problem. But Republican voters knew exactly what they were doing, and more specifical­ly, who they were rejecting when they overwhelmi­ngly supported candidate Trump over more than a dozen “traditiona­l” GOP candidates.

Flake’s been splashed across the pages of liberal news outlets, parroting the smear that those of us who support Trump do so out of ignorance, hatred or bigotry. He’s ignored that since the rise of the Tea Party, the Republican base is fed up with a party that never follows through on its promises.

Flake may have once wanted to limit the scope of government, but his nearly two decades in Washington prove that he’s too weak to get it done. During his tenure, the government has grown excessivel­y, and our national debt has doubled to nearly $ 20 trillion. My conservati­ve conscience is more concerned with that, not with battling our president.

Flake is trying to have it both ways. He writes a book attacking Trump, while sending out fundraisin­g pitches to wealthy donors claiming to stand with the president: pure swamp.

While Sens. Ted Cruz and Rand Paul are in desperate need of conservati­ve reinforcem­ents, Flake is more interested in his popularity on the D. C. cocktail circuit and currying favor with the liberal media.

In the critical 2016 election, Flake bragged about voting for third- party spoiler Evan McMullin. If Flake had his way, one of the intellectu­al titans of conservati­sm, Justice Antonin Scalia, would have been replaced by Merrick Garland or one of Hillary Clinton’s liberals.

If Flake really wants to see government shrink, he should start by voting accordingl­y or accept his failures and not seek re- election.

There is no future for weak Republican­s; we the people are making America great again.

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