GOP tries to head off Angle Senate bid
The controversial Republican is mulling another bid for Harry Reid's Senate seat after her ill-fated 2010 campaign.
By Burgess Everett and Elena Schneider
POLITICO.com
10/26/15 05:17 AM EDT
Republicans have had enough of Sharron Angle, the one-time Senate hopeful who crashed and burned against then-Majority Leader Harry Reid in 2010. And now the GOP in Nevada and Washington is trying to chase her out of another campaign that could again jeopardize the party's chances of capturing Reid's Senate seat.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/ story/2015/10/sharron-angle- nevada-harry-reid-senate-seat- gop-215081#ixzz3phEw5U00
The controversial Republican is mulling another bid for Harry Reid's Senate seat after her ill-fated 2010 campaign.
By Burgess Everett and Elena Schneider
POLITICO.com
10/26/15 05:17 AM EDT
Republicans have had enough of Sharron Angle, the one-time Senate hopeful who crashed and burned against then-Majority Leader Harry Reid in 2010. And now the GOP in Nevada and Washington is trying to chase her out of another campaign that could again jeopardize the party's chances of capturing Reid's Senate seat.
Angle’s
very public flirtation with a primary bid against Rep. Joe Heck, the
party favorite to take on Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, is reviving
Democratic dreams and Republican nightmares from the 2010 election.
Angle — along with lackluster candidates Christine O’Donnell and Ken
Buck — blew a winnable race for the GOP, and her name still causes
eyerolls among Republicans of all stripes.
And now that Republicans finally control the Senate, they aren’t about to let Angle screw things up.
"[Heck]
can win. It is about winning elections after all,” said Texas Senate
Majority Whip John Cornyn, who chaired the National Republican
Senatorial Committee during Angle’s run. Angle “had a shot and has been
unsuccessful. So my money is with him.”
Indeed,
Republicans do not believe that Angle can beat Heck, who is a major
recruiting coup for Republicans in one of the only competitive open-seat
elections in 2016. But there are two worries: That she could drag Heck
to the right and leave Cortez Masto running room in purple Nevada, and
that she could drain Heck's resources before an expensive general
election.
“Angle
doesn’t have a prayer, but she’ll cause some damage to Joe and make him
spend some money,” said Chuck Muth, a conservative activist in Nevada.
“We’ve got an excellent chance with Joe Heck to pick up that seat, which
could possibly determine if Republicans or Democrats control the U.S.
Senate, and I would hate to see her blow it again.”
A
divisive GOP food fight in Nevada would unquestioningly aid Democratic
efforts to win the four or five Senate seats the party needs (depending
on the result of the presidential election) to win back control of the
chamber.
Republicans
already are defending seven seats in states President Barack Obama won
in both presidential elections, six of which are very competitive.
Republicans
view Nevada as much-needed insurance to preserve their majority.
Democrats know that losing Nevada makes the math that much harder for a
party that already has little margin for error.
Reid,
the outgoing Democratic leader who withstood the 2010 GOP wave to
defeat Angle, is inflating her candidacy in vintage fashion to annoy
Heck and the Republicans.
“People
shouldn’t minimize what a good campaigner she is, how aggressive she is
— and frankly, she’s no dope,” Reid said in an interview. “If people
think that Heck is some kind of a moderate, she’ll certainly show that’s
not the case.”
Neither
Heck nor Angle would comment for this story. But Republicans are at
their first stage of grief with the possibility that she might enter the
race: denial.
“I
don’t think it’s even true,” said Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), a vice
chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. ”Heck’s going
to win this thing. He's going to win no matter what. He’s going to beat
the Democratic opponent too, but he doesn't need to spending a lot of
money in the primary to get there.”
Officially,
the NRSC does not take a position in open-seat primaries. Chairman
Roger Wicker of Mississippi said in an interview that the group would
hear Angle out if she came to them with a campaign plan.
But Angle hasn’t made that step.
“We haven’t visited about that. I haven’t visited with her since 2010,” Wicker said.
Republicans
in Nevada said rumors about a second Angle run cycled through the
state’s political class several weeks ago, but speculation turned to
concern this week when two Nevada legislators published a letter, urging
her to run.
State
Sen. Don Gustavson and Assemblyman Brent Jones, longtime Angle
supporters, called on voters to donate, setting a $5-million watermark
for the “Run Sharron Angle For Senate” cash effort; a post-script from
Angle on the letter read: "We can do this."
In
the 2010 primary, Angle, buoyed by an endorsement from the Tea Party
Express, beat former state Sen. Sue Lowden and several other opponents,
to some surprise in the state. Outside groups spent heavily in the
general election, shelling out $2.8 million in support of Angle,
according to estimates compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics,
and $7.7 million opposing Reid.
Her
2010 campaign is best remembered for a series of gaffes, including
telling a group of Hispanic high-school students that “some of you look a
little more Asian to me,” and her controversial campaign manager.
Angle
lost to Reid by a 6-point margin, with 2 percent voting for “none of
the above.” That's despite raising a staggering $28.3 million over the
course of the campaign — much of it from small donors — more than Reid
brought in.
Some in Nevada say that dollar figure inflated her sense of her own popularity in the state.
“Her
campaign was run from her kitchen table, done by a group who had no
experience in Nevada politics or campaigning, who fell into that win
because of the Lowden campaign mishandled things,” said an Angle staffer
from her 2010 campaign, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly
about the race. “That’s something that Sharron and her supporters would
never admit to, because they think Nevada still wants her.”
“She
snatched defeat from the jaws of victory,” added Ryan Hamilton, a
Nevada GOP consultant. “There is no appetite, even among the most
anti-establishment GOP activists at [the] grass-roots level, to see
Sharron Angle on a statewide ballot again.”
Without
“some kind of positive gesture” from national conservative groups,
Angle might decline to run altogether, Hamilton said. And so far, those
conservative groups who backed her in 2010 are not falling into line.
“We
would have serious doubts about whether a Senate candidacy in 2016
would turn out differently from her Senate candidacy in 2010,” said Doug
Sachtleben, a spokesman for the Club for Growth, which spent more than
$800,000 backing her and opposing Reid in 2010, according to estimates
from the Center for Responsive Politics.
Senate
Conservatives Fund and FreedomWorks collectively spent $280,000 in the
2010 race, but both groups indicated they were unlikely to get involved
in the primary on Angle’s behalf. With so many races to watch and
influence, conservative groups may get more bang for their buck
elsewhere with a candidate that has greater general-election potential.
“There
are some people out there that say Joe’s not conservative enough, and
some people say he’s too conservative and everything in-between. But
it’s like: This is the ultimate scoreboard business,” said Rep. Mark
Amodei (R-Nev.). “Joe Heck has won races in Clark County, and Sharron
hasn’t.”
Still,
some activists remain wary of Heck, who has lower ratings on scorecards
from conservative groups — even if those votes could help Heck in a
general election in a blue-leaning state.
“It’s not that they like Sharron, but they’re not happy with Joe’s voting record,” Muth said.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/
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