Yuma Sun

Senate run

GOP Rep. McSally enters race for Flake seat

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TUCSON — Republican congresswo­man Martha McSally embraced President Donald Trump and his hardline immigratio­n rhetoric as she launched her Senate bid Friday, lashing out at the same establishm­ent leaders who support her campaign to replace retiring GOP Sen. Jeff Flake.

The 51-year-old retired Air Force combat pilot attacked Sharia law and sanctuary cities while vowing to support Trump’s push to build a massive border wall. Her comments came amid a series of public appearance­s and social media posts as she trekked across the state flying a World War II-era fighter plane.

“I’m a fighter pilot and I talk like one,” she said in an announceme­nt video, a fiery beginning to one of the nation’s premier Senate contests. “That’s why I told Washington Republican­s to grow a pair of ovaries and get the job done.”

Later, she refused to condemn Trump’s closeddoor descriptio­n of African countries as “shitholes.”

“I speak a little salty behind closed doors at times as well, so I’m not going to throw the first stone on using any language,” McSally said after facing dozens of supporters inside a Tucson airport hangar.

Like few others, the Arizona election is expected to showcase the feud between the Republican Party’s establishm­ent and its fiery anti-immigratio­n wing in particular — all in a border state that features one of the nation’s largest Hispanic population­s.

McSally is the early establishm­ent favorite in the contest, even if she has recently adopted the same anti-establishm­ent message that fueled Trump’s political rise in 2016. One of her primary opponents, outspoken Trump backer Kelli Ward, was quick to call McSally “a pretender” on Friday.

The race will test the appeal of the Trump political playbook — which emphasizes the dangers of illegal immigratio­n and demands border security above all else — in a state where nearly 1 in 3 residents is Hispanic and roughly 1 million are eligible to vote, according to the Pew Research Center.

McSally, the first female fighter pilot to fly a combat mission, flew herself across Arizona on Friday. Her outfit for the big day: a blue flight suit.

She enters a dynamic Republican primary field that features a nationally celebrated immigratio­n hardliner, 85-year-old former Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who was pardoned by Trump last year after defying a judge’s order to stop traffic patrols that targeted immigrants. Another highprofil­e candidate, Ward, was an early favorite of former Trump adviser Steve Bannon.

Ward, like other conservati­ve critics, noted Friday that McSally’s past statements don’t necessaril­y match the figurative bear hug she gave Trump on Friday. “The truth doesn’t line up with her new campaign rhetoric,” she tweeted.

Little more than a year ago, McSally refused to endorse Trump, and she referred to his sexually predatory comments caught on the “Access Hollywood” tape as “disgusting.”

On Twitter on Friday, McSally thanked Trump for attacking Democrats who are contemplat­ing a government shutdown to protect young immigrants known as “Dreamers.”

“As we discussed on Tuesday, we won’t allow our troops to be held hostage by DACA negotiatio­ns. Our military is relying on us,” McSally wrote, using an acronym for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

She also co-sponsored an immigratio­n plan released by House conservati­ves this week that would reduce legal immigratio­n levels by 25 percent, block federal grants to sanctuary cities and restrict the number of relatives that immigrants already in the U.S. can bring here. The bill, which is unlikely to survive the GOP-controlled Senate, also provides temporary legal status for young immigrants enrolled in DACA.

McSally avoided her Republican opponents altogether on Friday, focusing instead on her military service while adding a jab at Sharia law — a reference to her fight against a military policy that required female soldiers in some Muslimmajo­rity countries to wear robes over their service uniforms.

“I absolutely refused to bow down to Sharia law,” she said. “After eight years of fighting, I won my battle for the religious freedom of American servicewom­en.”

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. REP. MARTHA MCSALLY, R-ARIZ., leaves in a T-6 World War II airplane after speaking at a rally Friday in Phoenix. McSally announced Friday that she is running for the Senate seat being vacated by fellow Republican Jeff Flake.
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. REP. MARTHA MCSALLY, R-ARIZ., leaves in a T-6 World War II airplane after speaking at a rally Friday in Phoenix. McSally announced Friday that she is running for the Senate seat being vacated by fellow Republican Jeff Flake.

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