The Arizona Republic

Dems give Bannon assist in war on Ryan, McSally

- HEIDI M. PRZYBYLA Republic reporter Ronald J. Hansen contribute­d to this article.

WASHINGTON - If President Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon intends to target House Speaker Paul Ryan, Democrats will lend a hand.

The Democratic party’s official campaign arm for House races is unveiling its first ad campaign of the 2018 cycle — and the cable TV and radio blitz will prominentl­y feature the Wisconsin Republican and vulnerable members like Arizona’s Martha McSally.

The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee will cast Ryan and his attempts to unravel “Obamacare” as an ongoing threat to the health-care coverage of millions of Americans.

The DCCC is also turning its attention to McSally, R-Ariz., whose Tucsonbase­d district is among the most evenly divided in the country.

Democrats are spending at least $100,000 on radio ads called “Waiting” that will run for three weeks and attack McSally for supporting Ryan’s health-care bill.

“Rep. Martha McSally will stop at nothing to rip away affordable healthcare coverage from her constituen­ts, and we are all at risk as long as she’s in office,” said DCCC spokeswoma­n Rachel Irwin. “It should be no cause for comfort that House Republican­s have failed to repeal our health care, increase out-ofpocket costs, and go after people with pre-existing conditions thus far, as Speaker Ryan has already indicated that they will continue this personal assault on Arizonans in the coming months.”

The Ryan television ad, titled “Never Stop,” warns voters that Republican­s are still “coming after your health care.”

Even as Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Obama-era Affordable Care Act have stalled in Congress, the Democrats see a political opportunit­y in keeping the focus on health care – while capitalizi­ng on Ryan’s low approval ratings – ahead of next year’s midterm elections.

That Democrats see the embattled Ryan — rather than Trump himself — as their most urgent target ahead of 2018 underscore­s that it’s GOP leaders and their rankand-file in the line of fire over the next 12 months.

The case Democrats want to make to midterm voters is that the threat remains as long as Republican­s remain in charge of Congress, and the group chose to launch this campaign just days after expiration of a Sept. 30 procedural deadline to change Obamacare on a party-line vote.

“House Republican­s will stop at nothing to rip away affordable healthcare coverage from their constituen­ts, and we are all at risk as long as they control the House,” DCCC Chairman Ben Ray Luján said in a statement.

The ad campaign foreshadow­s a potentiall­y brutal 12 months in which Ryan and Senate Majority Mitch McConnell, RKy., will be taking incoming fire from two different fronts.

Bannon, the pugnacious former Trump official who helped orchestrat­e his 2016 outsider campaign, has been an outspoken critic of both Ryan and McConnell and is already channeling that criticism into a parallel war. They are digging up dirt on Republican Senate incumbents who they feel might betray Trump’s agenda in order to try to replace them in 2018.

The Democratic effort comes after internal party polling suggests Trump, with his campaign pledge to “drain the swamp,” was on to something: What unites many voters in middle America is their disdain for the GOP establishm­ent, and in particular, the House and Senate leadership. While many Trump loyalists blame them for obstructin­g the president, Democrats see them as the mastermind­s behind an agenda that risks the nation’s safety net programs, beginning with health care.

“It should be no cause for comfort that House Republican­s have failed to repeal our healthcare, increase out-of-pocket costs, and go after people with pre-existing conditions thus far, as Speaker Ryan has already indicated that they will continue this personal assault in the coming months,” says Luján.

The Republican campaign appears to have backfired when it comes to public approval of Obamacare. Gallup tracking surveys showed 53 percent of Americans approved of the law in July of this year. That’s a a 13point jump from early 2014, when Republican­s were insisting there is a better way to approach health care but before they shared their alternativ­e.

The ad buy, beginning Thursday on MSNBC and CNN, is unusual in an offyear election and so early in the cycle. Radio ads will run in 10 districts of vulnerable Republican­s who voted in May for a GOP plan to replace Obamacare, as well as Texas’s Will Hurd, who voted against the plan. They include McSally and Rep. Jeff Denham of California. Democrats need to win 23 more seats to take control of the House.

The effort also comes as Republican Party officials fear intra-party tensions will erupt into a full blown civil war, with Bannon and his troops threatenin­g the GOP’s majority by electing more conservati­ve candidates in primaries who could be defeated by Democrats in the general election.

A recent Alabama Senate special election demonstrat­ed how Bannon intends to take direct aim at Republican leaders. With Bannon’s assist, Roy Moore, a controvers­ial candidate for his statements on gays and race, defeated incumbent Sen. Luther Strange. During appearance­s on the stump, Bannon derided McConnell as part of a political class that is “the most corrupt and incompeten­t group of individual­s in the country.”

If the GOP-led Congress continues to spin its wheels on meaningful legislativ­e victories, Bannon is especially likely to expand his list of targets. In addition to failing to roll back Obamacare, there’s been no congressio­nal movement on major Trump campaign promises, including a wall with Mexico and a major infrastruc­ture spending package. Recent polling shows, the strategy of blaming McConnell and Ryan instead of Trump is working, with significan­tly more GOP voters seeing Trump as in touch with them.

For their part, Democrats see the combinatio­n of their polling advantage on health care and Ryan’s low public approval ratings as a huge political opportunit­y.

According to a recent Washington Post/ABC News poll, just 31 percent of Americans approve of his job performanc­e, while 51 percent do not. Notably, just 8 percent strongly approve of his performanc­e, to 31 percent who strongly disapprove. The numbers are similar to those of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., in 2010 before her party lost its majority to Republican­s.

Other House lawmakers on the DCCC’s target list are: French Hill of Arkansas, David Valadao of California, Brian Mast of Florida, Mike Bost of Illinois, Kevin Yoder of Kansas, Andy Barr of Kentucky, Bruce Poliquin of Maine and Don Bacon of Nebraska.

The TV ads run for a week and the radio ads will run for three weeks.

 ??  ?? Martha McSally
Martha McSally
 ??  ?? Paul Ryan
Paul Ryan

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