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In this edition: May primaries and the GOP’s Ukraine fight, a conservative rebellion in Ohio, and a ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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April 30, 2024
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David Weigel

Does Ukraine aid actually move Republican voters? We’re about to find out.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

THE SCENE

On April 5, Indiana Rep. Victoria Spartz faced her Republican challengers in one last televised debate. All were asked if they’d support further aid for Ukraine, where the congresswoman was born. Most said no.

“No blank checks,” said former Hill staffer Max Engling.

“No, and I’m half Ukrainian,” said accountant Patrick Malayter.

“I do not,” said state Rep. Chuck Goodrich, whose TV ads accuse Spartz of working to “put Ukraine first.”

Spartz was harder to pin down. “Only with strategy on the other side,” she said, putting conditions on aid. “No slush fund and blank checks.” Two weeks later, she joined most House Republicans in voting “no” on $60.8 billion of Ukraine funding.

Over the next month, Republican voters in Indiana, West Virginia, and Nebraska will decide whether to re-nominate incumbents who voted to fund Ukraine’s war — votes that their base, and most conservative media influencers, opposed. Those politics have energized primary challenges to a few usually-safe incumbents, and helped nudge Spartz from a “yes” to “no.”

But the GOP electorate so far isn’t rising up to punish the pro-Ukraine caucus. Momentum for Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s motion to remove House Speaker Mike Johnson stalled over the last recess; she entered Tuesday without the votes to pass it. And West Virginia Rep. Carol Miller and Nebraska Rep. Don Bacon, both facing primary challengers who’ve attacked their Ukraine vote, are operating like the vote won’t matter.

KNOW MORE

Miller and Bacon are both facing rebellions at home, but not of the scale that usually topples incumbents. Days after the Ukraine vote, Pennsylvania Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick dispatched an anti-abortion activist who challenged him on that issue; “Fitzpatrick is too busy writing love letters to Zelensky to focus on YOUR needs,” Mark Houck wrote on X before the primary. The result: A 22-point Fitzpatrick win.

Bacon, who beat a gadfly challenger by 54 points last cycle, drew a better-known conservative opponent this year: Dan Frei, an activist who fell just short of ousting a different incumbent 10 years ago in the Omaha-based seat.

“It’s absolutely unacceptable to have our politicians dumping the treasury of this country into Ukraine while our border is wide open and our citizens are at great risk,” Frei said in an interview with Veterans for America First, celebrating the group’s endorsement.

Frei raised less than $100,000 for this race, but called for backup from pro-Trump Republicans angry about Bacon’s votes and his reluctance to endorse the former president again this year. (He did so only after Super Tuesday.)

Some answered the call. State party chair Eric Underwood endorsed Frei two days after the House’s Ukraine vote; Republicans in Douglas County voted to censure Bacon, citing among other things his vote for a “proxy war” in Europe with “little oversight or ability to track where weapons go and funds are spent.” The blowback to Bacon, said Underwood, was “a culmination — not just one Ukraine vote, but multiple Ukraine votes plus non-solutions for our own border.”

But the vast majority of elected Republicans in the 2nd Congressional District stuck with Bacon, one of just 17 incumbents who represents a seat carried by Joe Biden in 2020. It’s much the same in West Virginia, where Miller is being challenged by Derrick Evans – a former state legislator who resigned his seat after livestreaming his illegal push into the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Miller has local Republican support; Evans has been endorsed by House Freedom Caucus chair Bob Good. And Evans, like Frei, has tried to turn the Ukraine vote to his advantage.

“No flag should be waved inside of the House chambers. It’s the people’s House,” Evans said last week on CrossTalk, a show on the Russia-funded RT network, referring to the moment when the bill passed and members of Congress toted miniature Ukrainian flags. “Speaker Johnson has really just been a complete failure. He should have been vacated a long time ago. I don’t care what kind of chaos that would have caused.”

One challenge for the challengers: Trump himself didn’t join the opposition to the Ukraine package. He criticized the fact that the war happened at all, but not that Congress was sending money to Ukraine’s government. The final package was notably tweaked to incorporate his suggestion that some aid be structured as a loan.

“Everyone we hear from agrees with President Trump and Congresswoman Miller: It is in America’s strategic interest for Ukraine to prevail over Russia while we must simultaneously work to rein in our debt,” said Matthew Donnellan, Miller’s chief of staff. “The Trump-Miller position on Ukraine and other foreign assistance is only one reason we expect Carol Miller to remain the most popular elected official in the state of West Virginia.”

DAVID’S VIEW

The Trump factor — surprise, surprise — explains everything. When he spoke up, GOP opposition killed this winter’s military funding/border security package. When he stepped back, Ukraine’s Republican defenders triumphed.

Republicans who align closely with Trump, like Ohio Sen. JD Vance, mobilized against Ukraine funding but never got the former president to fully buy in. Without his disapproval, turning this into a litmus test for MAGA primary voters just wasn’t possible.

Look at how the American Action Network, the House GOP’s quasi-think tank, intervened. In February and March, it paid for polling in swing and safe seats that showed two things; swing voters were for aid, and the GOP electorate in safe seats wasn’t against it. A Ukraine vote, according to its data, would be a wash, with 33% of Republicans saying it made them “less likely” to support an incumbent, 33% saying it made them “more likely,” and the rest saying it wouldn’t matter.

“This vote is simply not the driving force in primaries that a few loud voices proclaim it to be. Stopping Russia by funding Ukraine is a clear winner with Republican seniors, the most reliable primary voters,” said Courtney Parella, the communications director at the Congressional Leadership Fund, AAN’s partner political group.

For the time being, an issue that divides Republicans isn’t enough to topple incumbents. The Spartz, Miller, and Bacon primaries will be worth watching, as a test of that — Spartz had one Ukraine aid stance when she planned to retire this year, and another after she changed her mind and started running against ambitious MAGA conservatives who called her a sellout.

“It’s anti-American to think that I would somehow — because I have a heritage, I was born in some other country — I wouldn’t do a good job for the American people,” Spartz told a conservative podcaster in one of her first interviews after the vote. “President Biden, he wants these never-ending wars, but you see what happens after we spend two trillion in Afghanistan.”

THE VIEW FROM GOP OPPONENTS OF UKRAINE AID

Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, who spent the recess campaigning for like-minded candidates in swing seats, said that Ukraine funding was “only one part of [the] calculus” behind his decision on who to endorse and where to rally.

“Sending $61 billion to Ukraine, after having already authorized $115 billion previously, has been very unpopular with Republican primary voters,” Gaetz said. “I’ve picked it up at rallies from Virginia to Florida to Nevada to Utah and beyond. Republican primary voters are particularly aggrieved that we did this while America’s border is wide open. In places where I’ve campaigned against my Republican colleagues, I’ve always raised the issue with voters, and it is clear they are paying attention. “

NOTABLE

  • Elsewhere in Semafor, Kadia Goba asks what the passage of Ukraine funding means for Mike Johnson: “Some in GOP fundraising circles see Johnson’s latest move as a potential turning point, not only because more traditional major donors agree with him on the merits of Ukraine assistance, but because they see his newfound decisiveness as a sign he may be able to stick around.”
  • In the Associated Press, Isabella Volmert profiles Spartz and her decision to oppose new Ukraine funding. At one speech in the district, she “made no mention of the war in Ukraine” and instead “framed the stakes of her reelection as a fight against party hypocrisy, saying some of her fellow Republicans act like socialists.”
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State of Play

Utah. Republican convention delegates rejected Gov. Spencer Cox on Saturday, 68% of them backing challenger Phil Lyman. In the U.S. Senate race, 70% voted for Trump-endorsed candidate Trent Staggs. Cox and other GOP leaders weren’t shocked; Republican activists at state conventions have voted to the right of the primary electorate, and since 2014, candidates who lost or don’t compete in the day-long sessions can petition onto the ballot. “Maybe you hate that I don’t hate enough,” said Cox, after delegates booed him, and as he detailed the conservative policies he’d approved after the GOP supermajority in Salt Lake City sent them over. Cox has led in polling of the June 25 primary, and Staggs left the convention with three challengers.

Florida. Candidate filing closed at the end of Friday, with a few surprises in Florida’s House races — most of them safely Republican or Democratic in November. In the 8th Congressional District, which runs along the Space Coast, Rep. Bill Posey filed for re-election, then withdrew just an hour after the deadline, endorsing former Florida Senate President Mike Haridopolos to “take up my battles against the swamp.” That maneuver — anointing a successor without creating a competitive primary — has been used many times by incumbents thinking about legacy. In the panhandle’s 1st Congressional District, veteran Aaron Dimmock filed to challenge Rep. Matt Gaetz, and the incumbent immediately went after him for an old LinkedIn post in which Dimmock endorsed the Black Lives Matter Movement. And in south Florida’s 21st Congressional District, far-right pastor Rick Wiles filed to challenge Rep. Brian Mast; he explained why with an X post, referring to how Mast wore an Israeli Defense Force uniform in the House after the Oct. 7 attacks. “I will never wear a foreign army military uniform,” Wiles wrote. “Always America first!”

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Ads
Moore for West Virginia/Facebook

Don Blankenship, “Honest Truth.” In 2010, shortly before the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster ended his career at Massey Energy, Don Blankenship debated Robert F. Kennedy Jr. about mountaintop mining in Charleston, W.V. “Two people who’d deposed you — they said, one thing about him is that he’s the most honest CEO in America, when it comes to answering questions about his company,” said Kennedy, in one light moment. That clip is the basis for this spot in Blankenship’s gadfly campaign for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination to replace Joe Manchin; the context is removed, cut down to Kennedy calling Blankenship “honest,” as the candidate says he’s so willing to tell the truth that he’ll risk assassination.

Mike Braun for Indiana, “Has Our Back.” Trump’s November endorsement of Sen. Mike Braun for governor made him the heavy favorite to win the GOP nomination, leapfrogging past Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch and other well-known competitors. Braun’s closing message is all about Trump, a validator (along with police officers) who promises that the senator will oppose “radical groups like [Black Lives Matter]” and fight illegal immigration, which no other candidate disagrees with; Indiana sent the National Guard to the U.S.-Mexico border two months ago.

Moore for West Virginia, “Values.” Riley Moore’s grandfather was his state’s longest-serving governor. His aunt has been in Congress (House, then Senate) for 24 years. His cousin is running for governor, endorsed by outgoing Gov. Jim Justice. None of that makes it into this ad; Moore reintroduces himself as a former welder (which he is) who battled ESG (environmental, social, and governance) funding as state treasurer (“when Wall Street came after coal”) and battled the “establishment” as — like the other contenders for this safely red seat — a “pro-Trump Republican.”

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Polls

Twelve years ago, one in eight voters told NBC’s pollsters that neither Barack Obama nor Mitt Romney represented their positions. The same share of voters say the same thing now about Trump and Biden. Democratic pollsters have found dozens of issues where Biden’s politics — populist policies in general, paid for by greater taxes on the rich — have broad support. But voters are focused more now on immigration and the economy, and trust Trump more than Biden. The president leads on one issue, abortion, and not by enough to move ahead.

There was never a point, not even in the first days after the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel, when most Americans approved of how the president was approaching the conflict. Republican voters agreed with Trump — that the attack wouldn’t have happened if he was president. Democrats stuck with Biden, but the youngest Democrats were less sympathetic to Israel than the president. Since October, the bottom’s fallen out. Just 19% of adults under 35 approve of Biden’s war strategy, just 13% of Republicans, and just 13% of conservatives. Democrats narrowly oppose Biden on this, and 43% of adults who say they otherwise approve of the president say they oppose him on Israel.

When Kennedy launched his presidential campaign a year ago, Democrats assumed he was best known for his last 18 years of vaccine skepticism. That wasn’t the case, and when Monmouth first started asking about it, only half of voters were aware of Kennedy’s public health views. Just 55% of voters (but 63% of Democrats) now associate him with vaccine skepticism, and majorities of all voters say his views make them less likely to support him. While just 10% of Democrats say they’ll consider him given that knowledge, 24% of Republicans say the same – another reason the Trump campaign is worried about Kennedy’s impact.

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On the Trail
Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

White House. Robert F. Kennedy Jr’s. patchwork ballot access strategy came through again on Monday, when he secured the nomination of California’s American Independent Party. Founded in 1968 as a vehicle for George Wallace, it’s maintained its status in the state ever since thanks to a popular mistake — voters who don’t want to register with a major party picking “American Independent,” instead of “No Party Preference.” In a nearly six-minute video, Kennedy explained that the Wallace-led party was “antithetical to everything my father believed in,” but had been “reborn as a party that represents not bigotry and hatred, but rather compassion and unity and idealism and common sense.” (Its new “statement of purpose,” affirmed over the weekend, mentions no policy issues.)

On Tuesday, Time magazine published its transcript of two interviews with Donald Trump, focused on his second-term agenda; Trump wouldn’t say whether he would reverse FDA approval of medication abortion, or side with conservatives who want to use existing law to prevent it being sent through mail. “I have pretty strong views on that, and I’ll be releasing it probably over the next week,” said Trump; the transcript was published 18 days after the initial interview.

Senate. Former Michigan Rep. Peter Meijer pulled his name off the Republican ballot last week, explaining that “the fundamentals of the race have changed since we launched this campaign” and that he didn’t see a path to victory. “Continuing this campaign,” he said, “only increases the likelihood of a divisive primary that would distract from the essential goal — conservative victories in November.”

Meijer was one of just 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump after the Jan. 6 insurrection, and one of eight who didn’t make it to the 2022 election; he lost the GOP primary to a pro-Trump conservative, and Democrats flipped the Grand Rapids-based seat. He said afterwards that he couldn’t support Trump for president, but abandoned that position when he entered the Senate primary. Last month, Trump endorsed former Rep. Mike Rogers anyway, and polls showed Rogers well ahead of a field that included Meijer and another Trump critic, former Rep. Justin Amash.

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Next
  • seven days until primaries in Indiana
  • 14 days until primaries in Maryland, Nebraska, and West Virginia
  • 21 days until primaries in Idaho and Oregon
  • 76 days until the Republican National Convention
  • 111 days until the Democratic National Convention
  • 189 days until the 2024 presidential election
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