The Arizona Republic

Gosar endorses Ward over House colleague McSally for Senate

- Yvonne Wingett Sanchez Follow the reported on Twitter, @yvonnewing­ett. Reach her at yvonne.wingett@arizonarep­ublic.com.

Rep. Paul Gosar, a conservati­ve Republican from northweste­rn Arizona, broke from traditiona­l norms and endorsed former state legislator Kelli Ward for the U.S. Senate over his colleague Rep. Martha McSally.

In a statement announcing the endorsemen­t, Gosar questioned McSally’s conservati­ve Republican credential­s, a public broadside to the conservati­ve image she has been peddling to primary voters as she seeks the GOP nomination for Arizona’s open Senate seat.

“We cannot afford another establishm­ent patsy who promises one thing and votes differentl­y,” Gosar’s statement said.

“Arizona has suffered for years with a lackluster Senate delegation that promised one thing during the election and did another back in D.C. — Kelli is not like that.

“Her opponent, Martha McSally, is. In my time working with Martha, I found her, though likable personally, to be very inconsiste­nt politicall­y. None of us can count on Martha keeping a campaign promise as she will fall for whatever the D.C. elite tells her to do at the time. I have seen that firsthand.”

Ward, of Lake Havasu City, embraced Gosar’s support and said she looks forward to fighting with him on Capitol Hill.

A spokeswoma­n for McSally, of Tucson, said Gosar is a less reliable ally of President Donald Trump than McSally.

“Rep. Gosar is a good man who cares about his constituen­ts, but the facts are the facts,” Torunn Sinclair, McSally’s campaign spokeswoma­n, said. “The fact is Congresswo­man McSally votes with the president 97 percent of the time, while Congressma­n Gosar only votes with the president 77 percent of the time. If he voted with the president as much as Martha, we could accomplish even more for Arizonans.”

Gosar is a four-term congressma­n and a member of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and could deliver to Ward primary voters who are not completely sold on McSally in the Aug. 28 primary.

He’s also a lightning rod for controvers­y.

Last year, Gosar came under fire for pushing far-right conspiracy theories, suggesting last year’s violent white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville was planned by “an Obama sympathize­r” and that liberal activist George Soros turned his fellow Jews over to Nazis.

With illegal immigratio­n as a top issue, Gosar — who earlier this year called for the arrest of “dreamers” who attended Trump’s State of the Union address — said Ward won’t cave to liberal interests, unlike McSally who has “many times supported blanket amnesty to criminals.”

In May, McSally dropped her support for immigratio­n-reform legislatio­n that offered a pathway to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed dreamers in favor of a less generous alternativ­e that she co-sponsored which also would sharply reduce legal immigratio­n.

McSally’s critics painted the move as political and opportunis­tic: It came as she was facing Ward, whose hardline illegal immigratio­n positions have defined her politics, and former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio.

Gosar said the decision is between someone who supports Trump’s full agenda and a “Never Trumper.”

McSally has not said whom she voted for in the 2016 election, and during a town hall last year, described Trump’s early days as “tremendous­ly bumpy.”

But on the campaign trail, much of McSally’s pitch is centered on her relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump and the access that affords.

While Ward is laser-focused on chipping away at McSally’s support, the Congresswo­man is attacking Democratic Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, the presumed front-runner in the Democratic primary.

Sinema faces activist and attorney Deedra Abboud in that race.

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