Leaving Arizona Behind

Written March 2024. A good take on a soon to be former Arizona Senator Sinema similar to soon to be former Senator Joe Manchin who also struck the same blow against Democrats pre-departure.

Later that same day, Sinema only got it half right when she tried to explain why she was not running to keep her seat.

“I believe in my approach. But it’s not what America wants right now. Because I choose civility, understanding, listening, working together to get stuff done, I will leave the Senate at the end of this year.”

Let’s translate that from politispeak to plain English: Sinema isn’t running because she knew she’d lose, which she ultimately didn’t see coming because she assumed she had managed to make the transition from being a progressive Democrat (before that she was a member of the Green Party) to an aspiring political independent with the courage to buck convention in the name of “doing what’s right” for the people of Arizona.

While it is true that Sinema’s voting record, especially in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate, evolved over her 20-year political career from that of tree-hugging lefty to something more akin to a center-right politician. What Sinema doesn’t get — or refuses to admit — is that it wasn’t her “civility” that turned “America” off. It was the arrogance she exhibited once elected to the Senate that left the Arizona voters who put her there feeling betrayed.

After joining the Senate, Sinema calculated that, to ensure her reelection, or at least lay the groundwork for even greater political aspirations — Sinema for President, anyone? — she needed to convince big money campaign contributors and the Republican elite that she was on their side, too. 

The trouble with her master plan was that Trump and the MAGA party’s hard-right base was never, ever going to trust her, much less help get reelected. 

And yes, Gallego did beat Lake in a close race.

Then there’s that little matter of the GOP’s shameless persecution of the LGBTQ+ community in general, and the trans community in particular, all of which should have made it crystal clear to Sinema, who is bisexual, that most Arizona Republicans, desperate to stay on the good side of Christian nationalists in their party, weren’t about to back her reelection.

It’s one thing for “normie” Republicans in the Senate to show up for a photo-op with Sinema in support of a get-tough bipartisan immigration bill. It would have been quite another to back Sinema’s reelection and risk the wrath of their party’s deeply homophobic base.

Yes, politics in the U.S. today is hyper-polarized. Sinema is right on that point.  

But it’s not because the right and left decided, each for equally legitimate reasons, to retreat to their partisan corners. It’s because the rightward jerk by Republicans that’s paralleled Sinema’s two-decade political career has brought us to a place where one of our country’s two major parties, the GOP, no longer believes in democracy, and Democrats are fighting hard to defend it.