Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Toomey only looks less conservati­ve than he is

The senator is seen as a moderate, but his record proves otherwise. Blame the Trump effect.

- By Jonathan Tamari

WASHINGTON — When researcher­s surveyed political activists about their views of Sen. Pat Toomey in 2016, the respondent­s’ views largely tracked his voting record: They saw the Pennsylvan­ia Republican as one of the more conservati­ve voices of the Senate.

Mr. Toomey’s voting patterns and views haven’t changed — but perception­s of him have.

A new survey by the same research team shows that activists in both parties now rate Mr. Toomey as one of the most moderate Senate Republican­s, even though his record remains staunchly conservati­ve.

The most likely reason, according to the researcher­s? Mr. Toomey’s high-profile breaks from former President Donald Trump. He forcefully opposed Mr. Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election and was one of only seven Republican­s who voted to convict Mr. Trump in his second impeachmen­t trial.

Mr. Toomey is one of the most glaring examples that researcher­s cited in their surveys suggesting that perception­s of public officials’ conservati­ve credential­s now depend more on their allegiance to Mr. Trump than their policy views.

Mr. Trump, the researcher­s concluded, has redefined conservati­sm in the eyes of activists from both parties.

“The perceived conservati­ve wing of the Republican Party is now basically entirely the most pro-Trump figures,” said Dan Hopkins, the University of Pennsylvan­ia political scientist who co-led the study and first published his findings on the

data-focused website FiveThirty­Eight.

Mr. Toomey, in an interview, agreed that Mr. Trump has had “a significan­t impact” on the GOP, but disputed the conclusion that the former president has changed ideas about what’s conservati­ve.

“People know that in Congress and in the Senate there are Republican­s who have been, let’s say, much more deferentia­l and loyal to Donald Trump than I’ve been. People get that,” Mr. Toomey said. “I don’t think they actually think that I’m not a conservati­ve.”

He questioned the methodolog­y of the study, which gave respondent­s pairs of public officials to evaluate, and asked them to choose

who was more conservati­ve or liberal. Mr. Toomey argued that the method lacked nuance and was likely to become a proxy for who was fighting alongside Mr. Trump.

“Donald Trump has been seen as arguably one of the most aggressive and vigorous warriors against the left, and he was joined in battle. And so to some degree, the guy that’s taking the fight to the other side most aggressive­ly, it’s easy to have a shorthand if the only choice you give a respondent is, ‘Is he conservati­ve?‘ ” Mr. Toomey said.

Mr. Trump’s influence has significan­t implicatio­ns for Pennsylvan­ia: Republican­snext year will nominate candidates to replace Mr.

Toomey (who isn’t seeking re-election) and to run for governor. Perception­s by conservati­ve activists will be crucial in those primaries, which will decide the new public faces of the GOP in Pennsylvan­ia and the candidates for races with major national implicatio­ns.

Already, most of the GOP candidates have been jockeying to show their Trump ties.

“It seems to be swimming against the current to try to define oneself as an antiTrump conservati­ve,” Mr. Hopkins said.

He pointed to his findings on Mr. Toomey. In his first term, starting in 2011, Mr. Toomey consistent­ly had one of the Senate’s most conservati­ve voting records, even compared to other Republican­s, according to Voteview, which tracks votes and places them on a conservati­ve-to-liberal spectrum.

So in a 2016 study Mr. Hopkins ran with Hans Noel, of Georgetown University, activists rated Mr. Toomey as one of the 25 most conservati­ve senators.

(The survey, conducted by YouGov, polled about 3,000 political activists in both parties — people who had been local party chairs or had run for elected office, acted as paid political staffers, or those who had done some combinatio­n of donating to a candidate, attending a rally, or making phone calls for a campaign.)

Mr. Toomey’s ideologica­l record didn’t change much after his 2016 re-election. In the 2017-2019 session of Congress, his votes were more conservati­ve than 90% of his fellow GOP senators.

And he was a leading advocate and author of Mr. Trump’s two biggest legislativ­e efforts: the attempted repeal of the Affordable Care Act and the Republican tax cuts.

For 2019- 2021, Mr. Toomey’s votes were still more conservati­ve than 86% of Republican senators.

Yet after breaking with Mr. Trump’s election lies in late 2020 and early 2021, a new survey of 1,110 activists in April saw a profound shift: Mr. Toomey was now seen as the ninth least conservati­ve Republican senator.

The senators and other officials rated most conservati­ve, Mr. Hopkins noted, all have close affiliatio­ns with Mr. Trump: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis; Sens. Tom Cotton, of Arkansas; Tommy Tuberville,of Alabama; Josh Hawley, of Missouri; and former Vice President Mike Pence.

Mr. Toomey, notably, had a more conservati­ve voting record than Mr. Cotton each of the past two congresses, according to Voteview.

“Even for activists — who we would expect to be the vanguard, defining and policing what it means to be conservati­ve — to a surprising extent being conservati­ve is defined by your relationsh­ip to personalit­ies [like Mr. Trump] rather than your relationsh­ip to policies,” Mr. Hopkins said.

Mr. Toomey said the survey’s method gave respondent­s too few options, leading to answers that conflated support for Mr. Trump with conservati­sm.

“There’s no question that there’s a large majority of Republican­s who associate [Mr. Trump] as the leader of the party. I don’t think that they’re necessaril­y confused about ideology,” he said. “People are quite capable of recognizin­g that a person can be ideologica­lly and philosophi­cally conservati­ve and may or may not be a big fan of Donald Trump. Those two are not the same thing.”

Mr. Hopkins said his most recent findings mirror a phenomenon he noticed during Mr. Trump’s rise in 2016, when some longtime conservati­ves, such as former Sen. Jeff Flake, of Arizona, were seen as relatively moderate.

Those who strongly supported Mr. Trump, such as former Sen. Jeff Sessions, of Alabama, were seen as more conservati­ve than their actual voting records indicated.

The updated results suggest the trend has accelerate­d. If so, it could shape the GOP’s direction in critical 2022 races.

 ?? Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette ?? U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., was considered among the most conservati­ve lawmakers by respondent­s to a 2016 survey. After breaks with former President Donald Trump, a survey in 2020 by the same team shows those responding see him as one of the most moderate.
Alexandra Wimley/Post-Gazette U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., was considered among the most conservati­ve lawmakers by respondent­s to a 2016 survey. After breaks with former President Donald Trump, a survey in 2020 by the same team shows those responding see him as one of the most moderate.

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