Former Governor Doug Ducey recently created a small firestorm in Arizona and the national media with his endorsement of political opponentsĀ Donald Trump and Kari Lake. Duceyās refusal to cooperate with Trumpās desperate effort to stave off certification of the 2020 Arizona election resultsāactually refusing in public to take the Presidentās phone callāhas made him a pariah to Trump loyalists.Ā And who can forget Kari Lakeās denunciation of Ducey as a McCainite and traitor to conservative principles?Ā By the end of Duceyās term as Governor his name was booed at Republican Ā events.Ā At least for now,Ā heās probably unelectable to any statewide officeĀ as a Republican.
But Duceyās endorsement of former adversaries validates two key principles of politicsā ideas are more important than personalities. Ā And winning is everything.Ā Being a Republican is not just a political Ā label. Wherever you are on the political spectrum,Ā everyone who identifies as a Republican agrees on a core set ofĀ principles– limited Ā government,Ā low Ā taxes,Ā free markets and the freedom and dignity of individuals. Duceyās endorsement of Republican candidates Ā āup and downĀ the ballotā, Ā including those who have opposed Ā him, demonstrates that he is big enough to put personal differences aside and Republican principles first.
My own experience with Governor Ducey is decidedly mixed.Ā As a legislator I opposedĀ his Red Flag bill and effort to put more cops in schools.Ā Ā When I warned about theĀ changing demographics of the state and said that too much immigration was anĀ āexistential threatāĀ to our unity and stability as a nation,Ā Ducey denounced me as a racist. People close to the Governorās office played a role in cutting short my second term in the Arizona legislature.
But my personal differences with Mr. Ducey do not overshadow my recognition of hisĀ accomplishments as Governor.Ā His tireless support for ESAs are a game changer in public education.Ā And his āflat taxā Ā income tax reform has put Arizona on a path toĀ joining the nine other states that have no personal income tax.Ā Personal differences aside, Doug Ducey was a successful Republican governor on many levels.Ā He will be speaking in Prescott Valley on Ā September 5th in his new capacity as CEO of the Citizens for Free Enterprise.Ā Ā Reservations can be made at https://communitysignatureseries.com/.
I have titled this article Call to Honor because it is addressed to my fellow RepublicansĀ as a reminder of what is at stake in the upcoming general election. Ballots will be mailed on October 9thājust 36 days from nowāfor the November 7th election.Ā As Republicans, we are honor bound Ā to support our party,Ā as Governor Ducey reminds us, āup and down the ballot.ā
After a hard fought and divisive Republican primary, that may not be easy for some of us. In our county and municipal elections, Ā a number Ā of incumbents lost.Ā Understandably, Ā their supporters are disappointed.Ā But the temptation to resentment and refusal to support the victor must be resisted. There is too much at stake.Ā JustĀ because we may not have gotten the candidate we wanted doesnāt mean the winner isĀ unworthy of support. We canāt afford to forget that if Republicans donāt win, Ā the otherĀ side will.
In contests for statewide office, Yavapai County plays an outsize role.Ā Along with Mohave and one or two other rural counties, we hold the key to Republican victories.Ā As the demographics of Arizona change, the conservative vote from rural areas becomes indispensable to Ā Republican victories. In 2020,Ā President Trump lost Arizona by ten thousand votes.Ā Abe Hamadeh lost the Attorney General race by just aĀ few hundred votes.Ā A little higher turnout in rural counties might have reversed thoseĀ results.Ā Yavapai County Republicans canāt afford to write off any of our Republican colleagues.
At the state level, the last six years have witnessed a political transformation. As recently as 2018, both of Arizonaās US SenatorsāFlake and McSally– were Republicans. Today both of Arizonaās US Senators are Democrats. In state level offices Democrats control the Governorās Office, the Secretary Of State and the Attorney General. Four of Arizonaās nine congressional seats are held by Democrats. The Mayorās office in Arizonaās two largest Ā citiesāPhoenix and Tucson, are in Democrat hands.Ā And they are within one seat of ending twenty years of RepublicanĀ control of Ā the Arizona House and Senate.
In Yavapai County where virtually every local office is held by a Republican, it’s easy to forget that rural Arizona doesnāt look like and doesnāt vote like the rest of the state. Weāre older, whiter,Ā and more socially conservative than most Arizona voters.Ā In this yearās general election, with Propositions 139 Ā and 140, Democrats have shrewdly put popular initiatives on abortion and open primaries on the ballot. These issues are not just popular with liberal Democrats. Many Independents and moderate Republicans support them as well. Republican strategist Chuck Coughlin is theĀ architect of Prop 140, the Ā open primary initiative. Over the years heās won a lot of elections. Conservatives may be appalled at the idea of open primaries. But across the state, a lot of smart people, including Republicans, are betting that Prop 140Ā will pass. The only way to stop it is a huge vote against it from Yavapai and other rural areas of the state.Ā On the abortion issue,Ā national and statewide polls have shownĀ that most women, including many Republican women, support Ā reproductive rights. Prop 139 which will enshrine abortion rights in Arizonaās state constitution is favored to pass.
At the national level, President Trump Ā andĀ JD Vance are taking a more moderate position on abortion. There is a huge risk that the outpouring of support for a womanās right to choose will swamp conservative Republicans in statewide races. Is this the hill we want to die on?Ā As a Catholic conservative,Ā I support the sanctity of life and oppose abortion in principle. But I also think abortion is a matter of personal morality.Ā I Ā donāt push my views on others or seek to enforce them through the police power of the state.Ā With all respect to the Center for Arizona Policy and other right to life absolutists,Ā they are leading the Republican party to a defeat that will cost us everything.
On November 7th, Yavapai County Republicans will play a critical role in the outcome of statewide elections. Those who didnāt get what they want in the primaryāand that includes the 15,500 voters who supported me for County Attorneyāneed to remember whatās at stake.Ā Like Governor Ducey,Ā as honorable Republicans, we need to turn out and support Republican candidates āup and down the ballot.ā












