Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Sen. Sinema's split from Democrats shows some party discord in Arizona

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX >> Kyrsten Sinema won Democrats a U.S. Senate seat from Arizona for the first time in a generation thanks in no small part to unity in her party and division among Republican­s.

That Democratic unity of 2018 was on display again in the next two election cycles as the party picked up Arizona's other Senate seat and won the top three state offices.

But that winning formula is in jeopardy ahead of the 2024 election because of Sinema's estrangeme­nt and subsequent divorce from the Democratic Party, which could complicate President Joe Biden's path to reelection and the party's hopes for maintainin­g control of the Senate. She registered as an independen­t shortly after last year's midterm elections.

Democrats are already voicing fears that a threeway race with Sinema picking up votes from both Democrats and independen­ts could hand the seat to a Republican such as Kari Lake, the failed gubernator­ial candidate and one of the country's most prominent election deniers.

“If there were ever a time for her to listen to her constituen­ts for once, it'd be now,” said Alex Gomez, executive director of the Latino organizing group Living United for Change in Arizona, which has tangled with Sinema for years. “She needs to step aside. The potential candidacy of a Kari Lake presents a clear and present danger to our democracy.”

Sinema has not said whether she will seek reelection, and Lake has not announced a Senate campaign. But the race already has a Democratic candidate in U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego, a Latino military veteran who kicked off his campaign last month after spending years as one of Sinema's chief antagonist­s.

Gallego says he raised more than $1 million on his first day in the race, capitalizi­ng on pent-up anger with Sinema among Democrats.

The Senate race is not the only new sign of Democratic division in the state. The Arizona Democratic Party last month had its first contested election for chair in 12 years, pitting a candidate backed by Gov. Katie Hobbs against one backed by most of the state's other elected Democrats.

The party elected longtime union leader Yolanda Bejarano, who was endorsed by U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly, Gallego and others, bucking the tradition of deferring to the preference of a Democratic governor. Hobbs said Thursday she had not yet spoken to Bejarano — nearly a week after the election.

The party discord in Arizona reverberat­es beyond the state.

Next year, Democrats, who have a narrow 51-49 Senate majority, are defending seats in 23 states — including seven where Donald Trump won at least once. That includes Arizona, where Trump won in 2016 but where Biden became the first Democratic presidenti­al candidate to carry the state in more than two decades.

Sinema's political career began with roots in the progressiv­e left and antiwar movement. She first ran for office as a Green Party candidate and lost badly, later winning a state legislativ­e seat as a Democrat. She remade herself as a moderate in the U.S. House and parlayed that reputation into a Senate victory.

Her 2018 Senate win was fueled by a number of factors, including the state's changing demographi­cs, contempt for Trump among suburban women and Sinema's spending advantage over Republican Martha McSally.

But McSally's 2018 campaign strategist­s laid some of the blame for her loss on Democratic unity behind Sinema and Republican infighting. With Democrats in lockstep, Sinema had a head start on reaching out to swing voters, while McSally focused on holding the GOP together to win her primary, campaign officials wrote in a memo that circulated widely after the election.

When Sinema was sworn into office in 2019, Trump was in the White House, Republican­s were in control of both chambers of Congress and Democrats were unified in opposition.

But her relationsh­ip with the party ruptured during Biden's presidency as she teamed up with fellow moderate Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and became a roadblock for parts of the president's agenda and many progressiv­e priorities.

She is one of the Senate's most vociferous defenders of the filibuster rule, which requires 60 of 100 votes to pass most legislatio­n, and which many Democrats say empowers Republican­s to overrule the will of the Democratic majority.

Sinema says she's focused on crafting bipartisan deals that can outlive any one party's control of Congress and points to victories, including a massive infrastruc­ture bill and protection­s for same-sex marriage.

Her transforma­tion from liberal rabble-rouser into Democratic irritant has left the base feeling angry and betrayed just four years after her victory brought Arizona Democrats in from the cold.

“As long as Sinema's off the team, that's all that matters,” said Dave Crose, a 67-year-old retired mechanical engineer from Sun City who voted for Sinema in 2018 but has grown disillusio­ned with her. “That's a bad thing to say, but she screwed everyone in the state, so payback's her hell.”

For Democrats, long shut out from the halls of power, winning was enough to paper over ideologica­l divides, but now they have shown they can win and it wasn't a fluke.

“When you have power, everyone wants a piece and there's actually something to fight over,” said Barrett Marson, a Republican political consultant in Phoenix aligned with the party's establishm­ent wing.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., arrives for a meeting of the Senate Homeland Security Committee at the Capitol in Washington, on Aug. 3, 2022.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., arrives for a meeting of the Senate Homeland Security Committee at the Capitol in Washington, on Aug. 3, 2022.

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