U.S. congressional primaries in five states feature polar political opposites

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[August 04, 2020]  By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Kansas arch-conservative Kris Kobach and prominent Michigan progressive Rashida Tlaib - candidates from the outer edges of the Republican and Democratic parties - are on the ballot Tuesday when five U.S. states hold primary elections for Congress.

The outcomes in Kansas, Michigan, Arizona, Missouri and Washington state will set the stage for Nov. 3 elections to the House of Representatives and Senate that will determine the balance of power in Washington.

In a tumultuous year, the Kobach and Tlaib races will test whether each party will steer to the right or left, or stay closer to the political center.

Establishment Republicans are vexed by the Senate candidacy of Kobach, a well-known firebrand who advised President Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign on immigration. He later served as vice chairman of Trump's short-lived voter fraud commission.

Kansas has not had a Democratic senator since the 1930s. But some centrist Republicans fear Kobach, who failed to win the governor's race in 2018, could put the Senate seat in reach for Democrats. Expected Democratic nominee state Senator Barbara Bollier is a former Republican who is breaking fundraising records.

The race is drawing in national Republican money the party will need as it fights to protect its 53-47 Senate majority.

The Senate Leadership Fund, a political action committee aligned with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, promoted Kobach's strongest opponent, Representative Roger Marshall, with a $1.2 million ad buy in the closing stretch of the campaign.

Kobach said the Senate leader should "stay out of it", arguing that polling shows whoever wins the Republican primary will prevail in the general election.

"Whenever a conservative is in the lead in a Republican Senate primary, McConnell jumps in to support the moderate opponent. McConnell wants a yes man in the Senate," Kobach said in a recent statement.

SQUAD REMATCH

In Michigan, a member of the "Squad" - four female freshmen who have become the face of the House of Representatives’ liberal wing – faces a stiff primary challenge.

Rashida Tlaib, 44, is in a rematch against a prominent Black leader, Detroit City Council President Brenda Jones. Jones, 60, lost to Tlaib by fewer than 1,000 votes two years ago. The district, which includes parts of Detroit, is over half African-American.

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Republican gubernatorial candidate Kris Kobach greets supporters shortly after the polls closed at his election night party in Topeka, Kansas, U.S. November 6, 2018. REUTERS/Dave Kaup/File Photo

Tlaib, of Palestinian descent, was one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress. She became famous just after her election for a profane promise to impeach Trump. A backer of former Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, she has not endorsed the party's more moderate presumptive nominee, Joe Biden.

Jones suggests that Tlaib puts celebrity ahead of constituents. "I am one that works with people - even when I don’t always agree with them - in order to get things done for my community," Jones said.

But Tlaib’s campaign spokesman said she had held dozens of town halls and helped residents secure unemployment benefits and protective equipment during the coronavirus pandemic.

In Arizona, voters are choosing nominees for what is expected to be one of the most expensive Senate battles of the year.

Senator Martha McSally is expected to win her Republican party primary over Daniel McCarthy, who says she is not conservative enough. The contest is a prelude to a daunting general election fight as she trails expected Democratic nominee, astronaut Mark Kelly, in the polls and has about half his $21 million campaign war chest.

Missouri features another House rematch. Democratic Representative William Lacy Clay faces progressive challenger Cori Bush, who became a community activist after Black man Michael Brown was fatally shot by police in 2014. Both candidates are Black. Clay or his father have represented the district in Congress since 1969.
 


(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and David Gregorio)

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