Trump acolytes poised to push out Senate dealmakers
Hat tip, Joe.My.God.
CONGRESS
Trump acolytes poised to push out Senate dealmakers
In the five states where Republican senators are retiring, the midterm elections could usher in a wave of hardliners who are nothing like their GOP predecessors.
By MARC CAPUTO
08/31/2021 04:30 AM EDT
If Senate Republicans seem conservative now, just wait until next year. The 2022 midterms could usher in a wave of full-spectrum MAGA supporters who would turn the GOP conference an even deeper shade of red and make the Senate a lot more like the fractious House.
In the five states where Republican senators are retiring, the primary election fields to succeed them are crowded with Donald Trump supporters who have made loyalty to the former president a cornerstone of their campaigns.
The three top candidates to succeed Sen. Richard Burr in North Carolina have all denounced
his vote to convict Trump in his last impeachment trial. In Pennsylvania, the four leading candidates to succeed Sen. Pat Toomey who, like Burr, was
formally rebuked by the state party for his impeachment vote have embraced Trumps calls for an audit of the states presidential election results, to varying degrees.
The absolute fealty to Trump is only part of the change this class of candidates would herald. There are institutional implications for the Senate as well. The bipartisan infrastructure deal Ohios Sen. Rob Portman helped broker? Six of the top GOP candidates vying to replace him
have rejected it.
At least five current House members have announced they are running for the open Senate seats, nearly all of whom are more hard-line conservative than the senators theyd replace.
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