Dayton Daily News

GOP leaders seek to shut out the right

- By Carl Hulse

GOP congressio­nal leaders are challengin­g conservati­ve activist groups in a bid to damage their credibilit­y,

WASHINGTON — As conservati­ve activist groups stirred up trouble for establishm­ent Republican Senate candidates in 2010 and 2012, party leaders in Washington first tried to ignore the insurgents, then tried to reason with them, and ultimately left it to primary voters to settle the matter.

But after several of those conservati­ves — in Nevada, Colorado and Delaware in 2010 and in Indiana and Missouri in 2012 — managed to win their primaries but lose in the general election, party leaders felt stung by what they saw as avoidable defeats.

This election season, Republican­s led by Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky are taking a much harder line as they sense the majority within reach.

Top congressio­nal Republican­s and their allies are challengin­g the advocacy groups head-on in an aggressive effort to undermine their credibilit­y.

The goal is to deny them any Senate primary victories, cut into their fundraisin­g and diminish them as a future force in Republican politics.

“I think we are going to crush them everywhere,” McConnell, the Senate Republican leader, said in an interview, referring to the network of activist organizati­ons working against him and two Republican incumbents in Kansas and Mississipp­i while engaging in a handful of other contests. “I don’t think they are going to have a single nominee anywhere in the country.”

McConnell on Friday began airing a radio ad in Kentucky that attacked both Matt Bevin, the businessma­n challengin­g him in the Republican primary, and the Senate Conservati­ves Fund, a political action committee that has been a particular thorn in his side.

McConnell’s ad, his `irst singling out the Senate Conservati­ves Fund, raises a criticism that House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and other Republican­s have leveled at the activists — that they are fundraisin­g and business enterprise­s more than political operations.

The ad refers to unnamed news media reports that assert that the PAC “solicits money under the guise of advocating for conservati­ve principles but then spends it on a $1.4 million luxury townhouse with a wine cellar and hot tub in Washington, D.C.”

Matt Hoskins, the head of the Senate Conservati­ves Fund, dismissed the criticism as exaggerate­d, saying the organizati­on simply rents a Capitol Hill townhouse rather than expensive downtown office space.

He interprete­d the new attack as a sure sign that his group’s campaign against McConnell was gaining traction.

“Mitch McConnell is clearly in trouble in this primary or he wouldn’t be attacking Matt Bevin and declaring war on conservati­ves,” said Hoskins, a California-based operative and former aide to Jim DeMint, R-S.C., who founded the group while serving in the Senate. “Mitch McConnell isn’t upset because SCF rents a townhouse for office space; he’s upset because we’re spending money on radio and TV ads that expose his record of voting for bailouts, more debt, higher taxes and Obamacare funding.”

The escalating tension between party leaders and tea party-aligned activists in groups like the Senate Conservati­ves Fund, the Madison Project and FreedomWor­ks arises from the activists’ view that some top elected Republican­s are major obstacles to enacting conservati­ve policies and need to be replaced.

 ?? PETE MAROVICH / MCT ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., speaks at the 2014 Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md. The GOP leader is under fire from conservati­ve activists who want him replaced.
PETE MAROVICH / MCT Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., speaks at the 2014 Conservati­ve Political Action Conference in Oxon Hill, Md. The GOP leader is under fire from conservati­ve activists who want him replaced.

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