Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

GOP Senators Baffled By Mitt Romney's Ploy To Oust Mike Lee -- And Maybe Thwart A Majority

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Ubiquitous

unread,
Oct 4, 2022, 9:34:52 AM10/4/22
to
Republican senators are growing concerned by colleague Mitt Romney’s refusal
to help fellow Utah Republican Mike Lee decisively win his re-election
campaign — a posture that could potentially keep their party from gaining a
majority in the November elections. Unlike every other Republican senator,
the 2012 failed Republican presidential candidate is declining to express a
preference in Republican Lee’s re-election effort against Democrat-endorsed
Evan McMullin.

“I respect [Romney], and I understand that each state has its own dynamics,
but I do not understand why he is remaining neutral,” said one Republican
senator who asked not to be identified. “Whatever our differences, we all try
to support each other around election time.”

Both moderate and conservative senators confirmed the grumbling in the
conference. “We should not have to be worried about Utah in any way. I don’t
know what he thinks he’s doing, but it’s not going over well, particularly
with the [senators] who are up for chairmanships,” said another Republican
senator. Neither Lee nor Romney responded to inquiries by press time.

A new poll from Deseret News and the Hinckley Institute of Politics claims
McMullin is only 2 percentage points behind Lee, with a full 16 percent of
respondents unsure who they will vote for. The poll is admittedly somewhat
difficult to believe, and not just because it was conducted by a pollster
with a history of dramatically overstating the electoral appeal of McMullin.
The group’s final 2016 poll, for example, showed McMullin losing Utah’s
presidential contest by only 2 points to Donald Trump. The final result was
that Trump bested McMullin, who actually came in third behind Hillary
Clinton, by 25 points.

Even so, the poll suggests the strategy McMullin shared with left-wing allies
at The Washington Post and other corporate media — building a coalition of
Democrats, independents, and Romney and his supporters — is working at least
somewhat according to plan.

In February, The Washington Post stated the obvious: Romney refusing to
endorse fellow Republican Lee would be a “boon” for McMullin and would make
it much “harder for Lee to consolidate the votes of moderate Republicans.”

Democrats also joined in the coordinated effort to help their party maintain
control of the Senate, declining to nominate their own candidate Kael Weston
and instead endorsing independent McMullin.

“It is disappointing to see Senator Romney take a back seat in his in-state
colleague’s race as Senator Mike Lee enjoys broad support from voters across
Utah and the country,” said Jessica Anderson, president of the Sentinel
Action Fund, a political action committee associated with conservative issue
group Heritage Action for America. “Conservatives should utilize every tool
possible to take back the Senate, starting with supporting incumbent Senators
in important races.”

Romney claimed he couldn’t possibly endorse in the race because he is friends
with both candidates, though it’s unclear why he thought his previously
unannounced friendship with McMullin would be harmed by him supporting
Republican incumbents and nominees, as all other Republican politicians do.

The Washington Post’s Henry Olsen scoffed at Romney’s line about friends.
“That’s sweet, but party loyalty matters, too. It’s one thing to disagree
within one’s own party; that’s what primaries are for. It’s another to say
that one is going to stay out of a general election and essentially tell your
own state’s voters that there’s no difference between your party’s nominee
and someone backed by your party’s adversaries. If that’s friendship, Lee
should start finding better friends,” he wrote in March.

Romney’s refusal to support Lee, and support his party’s message that they
have better solutions to what ails the country than their Democrat
counterparts, is making other Republican senators doubt his loyalty to them,
observers say.

“If you’re not going to have the back of your colleague in your state who is
a fellow Republican, how will I know you’ll have my back?” said one senior
Republican staffer, describing the thinking of the conference. “It creates a
certain amount of awkwardness in the conference as a whole.”

When he first publicly announced his decision not to endorse his fellow
Republican, Romney might not have imagined that Democrats would join the
McMullin effort. Romney is about as popular with Democrats as he is with
Republicans in Utah, holding roughly half of each group’s support. His
refusal to endorse in a three-way race would have likely had little
substantive effect on who won. But a refusal to endorse a two-way race is
much more significant.

Romney also might not have realized how vitriolic a campaign would be waged
by his friend McMullin, who has called the constitutional conservative Lee a
“conman,” pushed conspiracy theories, and supported disinformation campaigns
against Republicans.

All of this has Romney’s Republican colleagues concerned, and not just for
Lee, but for themselves.

Polls show Republicans on track to do well in November, but with several
incredibly tight contests. If Democrats were able to pull off an upset in
Utah, it would have profound consequences for the control of the Senate, and
the policies facing the country.

If McMullin and other Democrat-endorsed politicians were able to keep control
of the Senate, that would mean Bernie Sanders would chair the United States
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions rather than Rand
Paul. Gary Peters would be the chairman of the Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee instead of James Lankford. The powerful
Judiciary Committee would be helmed by Dick Durbin, not Lindsey Graham. And
Maria Cantwell, instead of Ted Cruz, would chair the Commerce Committee.

Both moderate and conservative senators expressed disagreement with Romney’s
work in support of Democrats. Several noted the potential unexpected
consequences of his alleged neutrality in the race. One of Romney’s close
friends is fellow moderate Susan Collins of Maine. If Romney’s stunt were
successful, two senators highlighted, it would mean that Patty Murray of
Washington, rather than Collins, would chair the powerful Appropriations
Committee.

A longtime independent, Romney was the Republican governor of Massachusetts
and a Republican nominee for president. In that presidential run, beset by
doubts from voters about how conservative a Republican he was, he claimed to
be “severely conservative” and to have had a change of opinion in favor of
protecting unborn lives from abortion.

McMullin was the figurehead of a 2016 coordinated effort to depress
Republican votes for the GOP nominee in a bid to elect Hillary Clinton as
president. At that time, he claimed to be motivated by concern that Donald
Trump was not pro-life enough and would not do enough to overturn Roe v.
Wade, the Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion on demand. After a
report that Trump’s three appointments to the Supreme Court helped overturn
Roe, McMullin put out a statement critical of their work.

--
Let's go Brandon!

0 new messages