The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

House GOP seeks women, fresh faces for 2020 challenger­s

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON (AP) >> Top Republican­s are searching district-by-district for just the right candidates — women and political newcomers in many cases — to help them recapture the House, six months after a political tidal wave swept Democrats into control with the most diverse majority in history.

Recruits include one of the few Republican women in the Oklahoma state Senate and a black political novice from Houston with Iraq combat experience and three Ivy League degrees on his resume. They are part of a GOP drive to gain at least 18 seats in the 2020 elections to win the majority — historical­ly a tall order for the party out of power in presidenti­al election years.

Finding women and minority candidates is an imperative for an overwhelmi­ngly white GOP openly embarrasse­d that just 13 of its 197 House members are women. By contrast, 89 of the 235 House Democrats are women and nearly 90 are black or Hispanic.

But Republican­s want challenger­s with other qualities too, following a 2018 election that saw the GOP lose 31 districts that President Donald Trump had won just two years earlier, many in moderate suburbs.

Desirable attributes include an ability to woo moderate GOP voters who’ve turned against Trump, whose name will be atop the ballot. In some districts they want political outsiders without voting records to attack, in others it’s political veterans with a proven ability to win votes. Enticing personal stories and an aptitude for raising

money also help.

“You will see a party that’s reflective of the entire nation. That would mean from gender to race to others, but it will also show that we can compete in every single district,” said House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.

Democrats scoff that GOP efforts will flop because Americans care less about candidates’ attributes than about issues like buttressin­g health care and wages.

“You can have all the interestin­g stories in the world, you can have an interestin­g background,” said Rep. A. Donald McEachin, D-Va., a candidate recruiter for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, House Democrats’ political organ. He added, “They are a party in the wilderness right now and they are deluding themselves — 2020 is going to be a lot about Trump.”

GOP leaders are boosting potential challenger­s including Young Kim, who wants a rematch against the freshman Democrat who badly outspent her but only narrowly defeated her last year in increasing­ly diverse Orange County, California; Karen Handel, elected to the House in an expensive 2017 special election, only to lose reelection last November by 3,000 votes; and Tom Kean Jr., who’s seeking a House seat in western New Jersey and hopes the popularity of his father, moderate former Gov. Tom Kean, will outweigh the state’s antipathy to Trump.

McCarthy says he’s met with over 30 contenders, of whom nearly 6 in 10 are women and nearly half are minorities. Rep. Susan Brooks, R-Ind., recruitmen­t chief for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, the House GOP’s campaign arm, says more than 130 women have contacted the committee about running.

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