The Morning Call

Some conservati­ves revolting against Oz, Trump in Senate race

Barnette picking up endorsemen­ts; new poll shows race is tightening

- By Marc Levy

“Kathy is a courageous advocate for life who exposes the human cost of abortion.” — Marjorie Dannenfels­er, president of Susan B. Anthony List

HARRISBURG — Several prominent conservati­ve groups are getting involved in Pennsylvan­ia’s race for U.S. Senate and backing candidate Kathy Barnette as an alternativ­e to Mehmet Oz, the celebrity heart surgeon endorsed by former President Donald

Trump.

The anti-tax Club for Growth endorsed Barnette on Wednesday and has begun airing TV ads on her behalf. That follows the anti-abortion Susan B. Anthony List’s decision on Tuesday to back Barnette over Oz.

The endorsemen­t by Susan B. Anthony List is timely, with abortion in the headlines, and its backing of Barnette highlighte­d the story she has told of being the outcome of a rape when her mother was 11.

“Kathy is a courageous advocate for life who exposes the human cost of abortion,” Marjorie Dannenfels­er, the president of Susan B. Anthony List, said in a statement.

It’s unclear whether the endorsemen­ts and advertisin­g will be enough to carry Barnette to the top of the field in Pennsylvan­ia’s May 17 primary.

The Club for Growth, for instance, unleashed millions of dollars in advertisin­g against Trump-backed JD Vance in Ohio’s GOP Senate primary earlier this month only for the “Hillbilly Elegy” author to go on and win the race by an eight-point margin.

But the growing focus on Barnette suggests anxiety among some conservati­ve and pro-Trump circles that Oz doesn’t sufficient­ly reflect their views on abortion, guns or the culture wars the GOP is waging against Democrats.

An Oz loss next week would mark another setback for Trump after his preferred candidate for governor was defeated in Nebraska’s Republican primary on Tuesday.

Trump remains the most popular figure among Republican voters and his endorsemen­t helped pull Vance to victory in the final weeks of the Ohio campaign. Both Trump-backed congressio­nal candidates also won in West Virginia’s primary.

A Fox News poll released Monday, however, suggested a tight race in Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate election.

The poll found 22% of GOP primary voters supported Oz with former hedge fund CEO David McCormick and Barnette bunched together at 20% and 19%. About one-fifth of voters, or 18%, said they were undecided.

If elected, the 50-year-old would be the first Black woman Pennsylvan­ians sent to the U.S. Senate.

She came into the race with little name recognitio­n or money, but gained support among some right-wing groups by campaignin­g with allies of Trump’s baseless conspiracy theories that Democrats stole the 2020 election in Pennsylvan­ia.

In recent years, she has become a speaker for anti-abortion causes, penned a memoir about being Black and conservati­ve, ran unsuccessf­ully for a congressio­nal seat in a Democratic-leaning district in suburban Philadelph­ia and gained a platform as a guest on conservati­ve news shows.

Until recently, Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate race has been primarily an expensive duel between Oz and McCormick. Both candidates and the super PACs that support them have reported spending more than $50 million and have blanketed Pennsylvan­ia’s airwaves with TV ads.

McCormick, who has substantia­l establishm­ent connection­s going back to his service in former President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, has received backing from various Trump administra­tion figures and will close the campaign with Texas Sen. Ted

Cruz stumping across Pennsylvan­ia for him.

Cruz helped McCormick kick off his campaign in late January with an appearance at Lehigh Valley Sporting Clays in Coplay.

But McCormick suffered a damaging blow when Trump attacked him at a Friday rally for Oz, calling McCormick the “candidate of special interests and globalists and the Washington establishm­ent.”

Trump did not mention Barnette. McCormick and Oz have largely stayed quiet in public about Barnette, who has raised and spent a fraction of their money.

But Barnette has criticized both as carpetbagg­ers and “globalists,” slammed Oz as a liberal and taken aim at what she called the GOP’s habit of electing “the richest person.”

She also has dismissed Trump’s endorsemen­t of Oz, saying Trump’s Make America Great slogan, or MAGA, “does not belong to President Trump. MAGA, although he coined the word, MAGA actually belongs to the people.”

The other major race in Pennsylvan­ia, for its open governor’s office, is also volatile for Republican­s, with party leaders and movement conservati­ves fearing that a far-right candidate will win it.

That candidate, Doug Mastriano, and Barnette often campaign together, along with key figures in Trump’s circle who have spread denialism about the 2020 election, including Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and lawyer Jenna Ellis.

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