NBC News Poll: “A majority of Republican primary voters believe it’s more important for their party’s presidential nominee to come closest to their views on the issues than it is for them to have the best chance to defeat President Joe Biden next year.”
“A full 56% of Republican primary voters say they prefer the nominee be closest to them on the issues, compared to 39% who prioritize beating Biden. The sentiment holds across virtually all demographics, except for voters aged 65 or older and those who consider themselves ‘somewhat conservative,’ who are split.”
Chris Christie told Bari Weiss he will “shame” Donald Trump into getting on the Republican presidential debate stage. Said Christie: “Quite frankly, I think he’ll show up ’cause I don’t think his ego will permit him not to.”
Matt Lewis: “Christie is the only contender who actually realizes the 2024 election is about one question and one question only: Trump or not Trump.”
“This is to say, the 2024 GOP primary is not about who has the best 10-point policy plan or who is the most anti-woke. It’s simply about whether or not Republicans want Trump again.”
“Christie is the only candidate whose strategy and message suggest he accepts this reality—and is acting accordingly.”
“What this means is that Christie can get on TV at any time he wants because Trump is always in the news.”
MISSOURI ATTORNEY GENERAL. Powerful conservative interests are backing an expensive campaign to oust Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey in next year’s Republican primary, including Leonard Leo, the influential activist who has spent decades pushing the nation’s courts to the right, and the radical anti-tax Club for Growth.
The effort seeks to install a Leo protege, former federal prosecutor Will Scharf, in Bailey’s stead, despite the hardline record he’s amassed in the six months since Gov. Mike Parson appointed him to succeed now-Sen. Eric Schmitt. Scharf, however, is arguing that his opponent “very much represents the establishment insider clique in” the state capitol.
Whoever wins will likely emerge as one of the most prominent politicians in a deep red state where several of the most recent attorneys general have gone on to serve as senators or governors. Indeed, while Republican Josh Hawley famously ran ads during his successful 2016 campaign decrying “career politicians just climbing the ladder, using one office to get another,” he did just that two years later when he unseated Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill. Parson went on to appoint Schmitt to fill the vacancy Hawley’s departure created, but Schmitt himself didn’t remain in the post long thanks to his successful Senate bid last year, which required the governor to once again pick a new top lawyer for the state.
The man Parson opted for most recently was Bailey, who had served as his general counsel but had never held elected office before. Bailey, who used his inaugural address to pledge that his office would seek the “unyielding pursuit of victory,” months later issued an order essentially banning gender-affirming care for anyone in the state. Even some fellow Republicans argued the attorney general had gone too far by prohibiting treatment for adults, including Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft, who is the GOP frontrunner to succeed Parson. Bailey rescinded his order in May just before the governor signed a bill outlawing such care for minors.
The attorney general has also been working to delay pro-choice groups from collecting the signatures they’d need to place a proposed abortions rights amendment on next year’s ballot, an effort that includes his preposterous claim that its passage would cost the state “as much as $51 billion dollars.” In addition, Bailey has been trying to overturn the conviction of a Kansas City police officer who was sentenced to six years in prison for killing a Black man, a move The Kansas City Star described as “unheard of in Missouri.” The Republican attracted headlines as well by trying to oust St. Louis’ top prosecutor, Democrat Kim Gardner, for allegedly failing to do her job; Gardner ultimately resigned in May.
Scharf, by contrast, has so far framed his attacks on Bailey around the incumbent’s connections in state government rather than his ideology. “There are a lot of stones that the Jefferson City establishment would rather remain unturned,” he told Jewish Insider in February, “I would see my job as attorney general as diligently flipping those stones.” But while Scharf is also a first-time candidate, he’s by no means a political neophyte: The challenger served as policy director to then-Gov. Eric Greitens, who resigned in disgrace in 2018 and went on to lose last year’s Senate primary to Schmitt.
Scharf’s national ties should prove far more useful to him, though. In 2018, Scharf worked as a consultant to Leo’s organization, then known as the Judicial Crisis Network, during Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation, and he later assisted Amy Coney Barrett in getting confirmed to the court from his post in Trump’s Justice Department.
Scharf told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch earlier this year that Leo is “a dear friend and mentor,” though Leo’s specific interest in Scharf is unclear, since Leo has generally been interested in extending his influence through the judiciary. Most notoriously, he made headlines last month when the Washington Post reported that he’d secretly directed tens of thousands of dollars in consulting fees to Clarence Thomas’ wife, Ginni Thomas.
The move from the courthouse to the attorney general’s office isn’t a very long one, however, so it’s not hard to imagine why Leo would be interested in cultivating elected officials. And he very much seems to value his mentee: His dark money group, now called the Concord Fund, so far is responsible for nearly all of the $575,000 that a pro-Scharf PAC called Defend Missouri has raised.
That PAC, reports the Missouri Independent’s Jason Hancock, recently transferred most of its budget to one affiliated with the Club for Growth. The Club, which has a long history of spending heavily in primaries, endorsed Scharf in April by touting him as “a constitutional conservative who has worked to advance free market policies.” (The statement did not mention Bailey.) And it’s possible that Scharf’s past with Greitens is actually a plus for the Club: Hancock notes that its largest donor, Richard Uihlein, is a longtime Greitens ally who bankrolled a super PAC to aid the ex-governor’s failed Senate bid.
CALIFORNIA U.S. SENATOR. Former Google executive Lexi Reese declared Thursday that she was joining the top-two primary to succeed her fellow Democrat, retiring Sen. Dianne Feinstein, an announcement that comes two weeks after Reese formed an exploratory committee. The new contender used her kickoff to pitch herself as a political outsider in a field where the main candidates are Democratic Reps. Barbara Lee, Katie Porter, and Adam Schiff.
Reese told the Los Angeles Times she’d be using a “significant” amount of her own money for the campaign, but she added, “I don’t have a definitive number because I think it depends on how this is going.” The former tech executive, who is competing in a state that has famously rejected several wealthy first-time candidates who wanted the governorship or a Senate seat, also says she plans to raise money from donors.
The presence of Reese, as we noted before, could make it easier for a Republican to advance to the general election in a dark blue state that’s hosted several fall contests between two Democrats. The San Mateo County resident also ends Lee’s status as the only serious Democratic candidate who hails from the Bay Area instead of from Southern California.
MONTANA U.S. SENATOR. Navy SEAL veteran Tim Sheehy on Thursday earned an endorsement from Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte. The governor’s team just before Thanksgiving didn’t rule out the idea that Gianforte himself could challenge Democratic incumbent Jon Tester, but there was never any indication he was seriously thinking about it.
Sheehy “runs a company that gets most of its money from federal government contracts, presenting potential conflict-of-interest questions that US Senate hopefuls usually don’t face,” Bloomberg Law reports.
Politico: “The race to take on Sen. Jon Tester, one of the most vulnerable Democrats on the ballot next year, kicked off Tuesday with a campaign launch by Tim Sheehy, a Navy SEAL-turned-aerial firefighter.”
“Within a day he had secured the support of the chair of the Senate GOP campaign arm and endorsements from three other senators — a clear show of force aimed at spooking Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-MT), a likely primary rival, out of running.”
“A member of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus, Rosendale has privately told lawmakers he plans to make another run against Tester after failing to beat the incumbent five years ago. His lackluster fundraising and bruising past loss have left party strategists and donors nervous that Rosendale would struggle to win a general election in a state that is crucial to the GOP’s path to the majority.”
MICHIGAN U.S. SENATOR. Former House Intelligence Chair Mike Rogers (R) “is seriously weighing a campaign for Michigan’s open Senate seat, a move that would shake up the state’s sleepy Senate race and divert him away from a longshot presidential bid,” Politico reports.
NEVADA U.S. SENATOR. Unnamed sources close to Army veteran Sam Brown, whom national Republicans reportedly have spent months working to recruit, tell Jewish Insider they expect him to announce in July that he’ll challenge Democratic incumbent Jacky Rosen. Brown would face Jim Marchant, a prominent election denier who was the party’s 2022 nominee for secretary of state, in the primary.
LOUISIANA GOVERNOR. Attorney General Jeff Landry’s allies at the Club for Growth have publicized a mid-June internal from WPA Intelligence showing their man as the one Republican taking double-digit support in the October all-party primary, a move that came one day after former state Chamber of Commerce head Stephen Waguespack’s backers released very different numbers. WPA has Landry in front with 35% as former state Transportation Secretary Shawn Wilson, who is the only serious Democrat in the race, leads Waguespack 17-6 for second.
Remington Research’s internal for the pro-Waguespack Reboot Louisiana, by contrast, placed Wilson in first with 27% as Landy edged out their candidate only 25-16. Remington argued that Reboot’s expensive ad campaign has weakened Landry while boosting Waguespack, but WPA finds a more stable race: Its memo says that an early May poll, which was not previously released, showed Landry and Waguespack respectively taking 32% and 2%.
NORTH CAROLINA GOVERNOR. Retiring state Supreme Court Justice Michael Morgan on Wednesday unexpectedly told The News & Observer that he was considering entering a Democratic primary where Attorney General Josh Stein has been the only notable candidate since January. Morgan, who would be the state’s first Black chief executive, said that unnamed Democrats were encouraging him to run, adding, “[W]hile I highly respect the declared candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor, I feel inclined to respect the calls that I’m getting.”
OREGON SECRETARY OF STATE. Gov. Tina Kotek announced Wednesday that she was appointing former Portland Auditor LaVonne Griffin-Valade to fill the office that their fellow Democrat, Shemia Fagan, resigned from in early May (federal authorities are currently investigating the matter.). Kotek’s team said it would be up to Griffin-Valade, who left office in 2014 and went on to become a published novelist, if she’d run next year, though the Willamette Week says she’s “not expected” to.
This post became open almost two months ago when Fagan stepped down shortly after acknowledging she’d been doing paid consulting work for a cannabis company at a time when her office was finishing an audit into how the state regulates such businesses. (Federal authorities are currently investigating the matter.) Oregon’s last governor, Democrat Kate Brown, twice filled vacancies for secretary of state with appointees who pledged not to seek a full term, and she publicly urged Kotek to take the same approach. The current chief executive, though, said it was more important to find someone who would “restore confidence in the office” than to select a person who’d agree not to run.
While Oregon is one of just a handful of states that lacks a lieutenant governor’s office and instead has the secretary of state serve as first in the line of succession when vacancies arise for governor, that provision only applies to elected incumbents, not appointed ones. State Treasurer Tobias Read, who unsuccessfully ran against Kotek for the Democratic nomination last year, will thus remain first in line until someone is elected secretary of state next year.
NEW YORK CITY COUNCIL. Yusef Salaam, who was one of the Central Park Five who spent seven years in prison before being exonerated in 1997, decisively won Tuesday’s Democratic primary for a dark blue seat in Harlem. Salaam is at 51% with almost votes in, with Assembly members Inez Dickens and Al Taylor far back with 25% and 15%, respectively. (The balance went to incumbent Kristin Richardson Jordan, who dropped out in May but remains on the ballot.) Instant-runoff tabulations would be needed if Salaam fell below 50%, but there’s no question he’d still win.
Another notable result took place in eastern Brooklyn where City Councilman Charles Barron, who has a long history of praising deposed dictators like Muammar Gaddafi and Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, appears to have lost renomination to community organizer Chris Banks 51-44. Barron briefly rose to national prominence in 2012 when he competed in the primary for the open 8th Congressional District against Hakeem Jeffries. Jeffries, to the relief of national Democrats, won 72-28 a decade before becoming minority leader, and Barron last year responded to his old rival’s ascension by calling him a “go-along, get-along politician.” Unsurprisingly, Jeffries was a major Banks supporter.
“It’s because they believe DeSantis is competent enough to follow through.”
That’s from the Mother Jones tweet on their article above. And begs the question on how this guy thinks he will be able to move to the center after the primary. Because authoritarianism is definitely not center anything.