Trump hovers over McCain, Rubio U.S.
Senate re-election contests
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[August 30, 2016]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican voters in
Arizona and Florida are expected to pick Senators John McCain and Marco
Rubio as their respective U.S. Senate nominees when they go to the polls
on Tuesday, but one name not on either ballot, Donald Trump, looms
large.
The Republican presidential nominee has endorsed both McCain and Rubio
in their re-election bids even though he has rocky relations with both
senators.
Trump offended McCain and many other Republicans last year by suggesting
that the maverick senator and party's 2008 presidential nominee was
anything but a war hero because he was captured during the Vietnam War
after his airplane was shot down during a bombing mission.
In March, Trump ended Rubio's presidential bid by trouncing him in the
Florida primary to cap a race in which the New York businessman taunted
the first-term senator as "little Marco," and Rubio insulted Trump on
everything from his hair color and the size of his hands to misspelled
words in tweets.
During their re-election efforts, both McCain and Rubio have offered
support for Trump as the party's White House nominee. But they have
tiptoed around him, mainly out of concern that his provocative comments
on illegal immigration, Muslims and U.S. support for NATO could alienate
moderate and independent voters in their states.
At the same time, they have steered clear of attacks on Trump that might
antagonize his core supporters.
Adding to the intrigue is that the fates of the two senators will likely
play a big role in whether Republicans can upset expectations and
maintain majority control of the Senate after the Nov. 8 election.
But first, McCain will have to win Tuesday's Republican primary in
Arizona and Rubio will have to prevail in Florida.
McCain, who is trying to extend a 30-year Senate career, faces a
challenge from physician and former state Senator Kelli Ward, who is
aligned with the conservative Tea Party movement.
McCain leads Ward by 55 percent to 29 percent, according to a CNN
opinion poll released last week. But Ward is ratcheting up her attacks,
arguing: "It's time to defeat the establishment and retire McCain."
In an interview last week with Politico, Ward called McCain, 80, "a
pretty sour old guy." Citing her medical background, she questioned
whether he would even live long enough to complete another six-year
Senate term.
Ward has aligned herself with Trump, who will face Democrat Hillary
Clinton in November's presidential election.
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Republican nominee Donald Trump speaks at "Joni's Roast and Ride" in
Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., August 27, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
MIXING THE MORTAR
Echoing Trump's call for the building of a wall on the southern
border with Mexico, Ward has boasted: "It's time to mix the mortar
to fix the border."
Trying to neutralize Ward's appeal with conservatives, McCain has
touted his support for gun rights, his vow to cut government waste
and endorsements from anti-abortion leaders.
If McCain, who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee, wins on
Tuesday, he would face Democratic U.S. Representative Ann
Kirkpatrick.
While McCain has said he is in the toughest re-election fight of his
career, the CNN poll has him opening a 13-point lead over
Kirkpatrick.
Rubio, who decided last year not to seek re-election to the Senate
in order to pursue the Republican presidential nomination, jumped
into the race in June after his failed White House bid.
His late decision to seek a second Senate term came at the urging of
Republican Party leaders, who viewed him as their best hope for
preventing Democrats from taking the seat.
That prompted the major Republican Senate candidates to quit,
leaving Carlos Beruff, 58, a millionaire homebuilder and newcomer to
politics, as Rubio's main primary challenger. Like Ward, Beruff has
embraced Trump and has accused Rubio of "tap dancing" around the
presidential nominee and only offering him lukewarm support.
Rubio is polling well ahead of Beruff. A win on Tuesday means Rubio
would likely face U.S. Representative Patrick Murphy, who leads the
Democratic field.
(Additional reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Caren Bohan and
Peter Cooney)
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