THE HILL
 

House Republicans may face a ‘civil war’ over Scozzafava bid

By Reid Wilson - 10/15/09 05:05 AM ET

The House GOP conference is bitterly divided over a centrist New York Republican’s run for the House seat vacated by Army Secretary John McHugh.

Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava, who backs abortion rights and has voiced support for gay rights, has drawn a challenger from the right who is running on the Conservative Party line. And though House leaders have urged conference members to donate, many have pointedly refused to back Scozzafava.

The Club for Growth, Concerned Women of America, former Sen. Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.) and evangelical leader Gary Bauer have all endorsed Doug Hoffman, the Conservative Party candidate.

The divide could foreshadow bigger troubles ahead for a party that hopes to make big gains in the House in 2010 and dreams of taking back the majority. Some members think that will be impossible as long as the party is divided over supporting centrist candidates.

“The Hoffman campaign is a real revolt against the Republican establishment and leadership, not just in New York but nationally,” said a conservative GOP congressman, adding that Scozzafava’s candidacy “could set off a civil war inside the Republican Party.”

Just 17 members — about 10 percent of the GOP conference — have written checks to Scozzafava’s campaign. They include House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.), National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) Chairman Pete Sessions (Texas) and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who is in charge of recruiting candidates to run next year.

Notably absent from that list is Rep. Mike Pence (Ind.), the Republican Conference chairman. Pence, the former chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee, has refused to endorse Scozzafava.

“I don’t think this is an NRCC problem. This is a much broader Republican problem,” said the conservative lawmaker, who requested anonymity when discussing internal Republican politics. “The inability of the Republican coalition to coalesce is going to be a huge challenge for us in 2010."

In an effort to prove Scozzafava can attract conservatives, Sessions pushed Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) to step up and endorse her. After his announcement, Hensarling took shots from some prominent conservative blogs and media outlets, with some going so far as to lob unfounded charges about Hensarling’s personal life.

Leadership aides blame those incidents on Pence, and say his decision not to endorse Scozzafava harms cohesion.

“It breaks down the leadership team when we all can’t be together,” one leadership aide said. “When you see a good guy like Jeb Hensarling step into the fray to take that bullet, you kind of scratch your head and say, ‘Do we really want a Republican majority, or are we in it for something else here?’ ”

Hensarling declined to be interviewed about his endorsement of Scozzafava. A spokesman said he had nothing to add to his statement, issued last Friday.

A second GOP congressman said his party’s leaders should be glad to welcome a female candidate with the background to win a district in a part of the country where Republican strength has declined.

“It’s hard to fathom that anyone in our elected leadership, especially after the past two election cycles in the Northeast, would be so tepid in supporting adding another woman to the House Republican Conference,” the congressman said.

But others defend Pence’s decision to stay out of the race. The conservative House GOP member said Scozzafava’s positions put her so far out of the Republican mainstream that, were she to win, she could do damage to the entire party’s brand.

“A lot of people in the conference are having a hard time [supporting Scozzafava]. This is somebody who’s for the stimulus package, for cap-and-trade, for card-check,” the conservative said. “We’re on the verge of losing that race up there because we’ve got a candidate who can’t hold the Republican coalition together.”

A Pence spokesman refused to comment on his decision not to back Scozzafava.

Don Seymour, a Boehner spokesman, did not indicate his boss saw any friction within party leadership.

“We’re pleased with the support Dede has received from leadership and members of the conference,” Seymour said.

A spokesman for Scozzafava’s campaign said it is happy with the support it has received.

“On Election Day, we’re going to be in a position to win this race,” said Matt Burns, a campaign spokesman.

The number of Republicans in Congress backing Scozzafava will rise in the coming days.

On Wednesday, 11 House Republican women hosted a lunch for Scozzafava. And Wednesday night, most of the House GOP leadership, including Boehner, Cantor, McCarthy, Sessions, conference Vice Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.) and conference Secretary John Carter (Texas) hosted a fundraiser for Scozzafava at the home of ex-Rep. Nancy Johnson (R-Conn.).

Scozzafava was nominated by the chairmen of the local county party, and is competing for a district with about 46,000 more registered Republicans than Democrats. However, it gave President Barack Obama 52 percent of the vote in 2008.

Source:
http://thehill.com/homenews/house/63163-house-gop-may-face-a-civil-war-over-scozzafava

Comments (72)

We need to stand behind Mrs. Scozzafava, the republican party has become so entrenched to the far far far right, that the chances of sliding back to the center are slim. We need to represent all the people of the country, on both sides.BY Daren Morgan on 10/15/2009 at 08:47
Unfortunately, Dede is not even a "centrist". She is a liberal, having been endorsed by the left-wing blog DailyKos. Are the so-called "modernizers" in the GOP thinking that Republicans must now support cap and trade, the stimulus, card check to be successful? Honestly, how would that make the GOP any different than Democrats?Forget the fact that cap and trade, card check, the stimulus, etc are antithetical to the philosophy of the vast majority of the Republican base, they are highly unpopular with the population at large. How is that going to be a winning formula for Republicans?The fact is, those asinine policies advocated by the left-wing of the Democrat party are supported by the so-called "educated elite" that populate Washington DC. They have no clue how they are viewed by the vast majority of this country.Vote Hoffman!BY Mark on 10/15/2009 at 09:23
Sorry DM, but if you can't stand against abortion, register as a Democrat.BY Grumpy Antwerpian on 10/15/2009 at 09:26
It never fails. Another un-educated, mis-informed, "tea party" howler claims they know what the "vast majority of this country is thinking". News flash to Mork. This "educated elitist" says you haven't a clue. I"m loud and proud to be a "LIBERAL", a "DEMOCRAT", an "EDUCATED ELITIST". Stick your labels in your ear Mork.BY James on 10/15/2009 at 10:01
***but if you can't stand against abortion, register as a Democrat.*** ——-> The very reason we Republicans are doomed. The abortion wackos have hijacked our party and put out the UNWELCOME sign to anyone who doesn't share their religious views. Fiscal conservatives needed to push the liberals out of office, but want to elect a President, not a POPE , stay home in droves. We, as a party, need to purchase kevlar boots…Dopes like Grumpy Antwerpian will keep shooting the party in the foot.BY TruthfulTerry on 10/15/2009 at 10:50
Scozzafava is not a republican. She is a democrat. It would be like Sarah Palin running on the democratic ticket. Its absurd. Hopefully, by election day, the republicans in the district wake up and all vote for Hoffman.BY Mayor on 10/15/2009 at 11:03
I'm a registered democrat in the 23rd district. Isn't democracy all about voting for the person with the most integrity and honesty. Someone who will and has been there to help the LOCAL residents? Dede, my wife and I will be votig for you. Good luck!BY Dale Hopkins on 10/15/2009 at 11:16
You would think Dede would do the right thing and DROP OUT of the race.There are too many Republicans here who would never vote for a social liberal. The new poll today shows a conservative Republican on the ticket would easily beat the Democrat when you combine the votes for Dede and Doug Hoffman.What was the Republican party thinking running HER??!! Maybe, "How do we lose the district?" They are clueless!! (Shows just how out of touch they are with the voters of this district)Send your money to Doug Hoffman, (who by the way is also a Republican), not the Republican party.BY Cnsrvtv Repblcn Wmn on 10/15/2009 at 11:33
The problem is NOT her position on abortions, That IS costing us otherwise conservative seats. Its her hard left positions on card check, health care reform, the stimulus package and cap, tax and no trade and, undoubtedly, reverse discrimination. She is not a Republican. She is an upstate John Lindsay, and she is as far to the left as he was. Based on her domestic policy positions, does anything think she'd be any better on national security and defense issues? I doubt it. How do we convince voters, who we fooled once with Tom Delay and his K Street ear marks that we've reformed ourselves if all we do run another John Lindsay? Hopefully, Hoffman will win and send a real message to the House GOP "leadership".BY Joel Mandelman on 10/15/2009 at 12:17
I live in this district and I am a DEM who "competed" for the nomination back in August when it was "given" to the INDY (not yet a DEM Bill Owens - he can't legally be a DEM until after the election) … The DCCC, other DEMs, and big-named money (Biden, Clinton, Obama, et al) is flowing in as well as a ton of money from outside. It is the money and ideas and issues are nowhere in sight.So, the GOP not giving Dede money is right in line with them in Congress "No" ideas = "No" money. That fits. ~ Dan Francis (Watertown, NY)BY Dan Francis on 10/15/2009 at 12:50

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