It used to be surprising when Rep. Martha McSally made an off-color comment.
Back in 2012, then-candidate McSally got lots of attention when she responded to a presidential candidateâs objections to women in combat by saying this on national TV: âI agree with many of the things that Rick Santorum says, but when I heard this I really just wanted to go kick him in the jimmy.â
Now that she is running for U.S. Senate, it seems like every time she opens her mouth, she kicks another jimmy. Whether her coarse language is a good thing or a bad thing is for the voters to decide. But probably more important is to keep aware of what positions sheâs taking when she makes her off-color comments, and whether the saltiness is being used to cover up the meat of the matter.
Wednesday night on Tucker Carlsonâs Fox News show, McSally talked about Democratsâ role in a possible government shutdown this way: âWhile our troops are over there risking their lives for us, these guys are dicking around â excuse my language â trying to come up with some issue thatâs not even in the top 20 priority of the American people.â
That came after her introductory Senate-campaign video last week, in which she said that Washington, D.C., Republicans should âgrow a pair of ovaries.â
Before that, in July, there was the behind-closed-doors comment to fellow Republicans about a Republican plan to kill the Affordable Care Act: âLetâs get this f***ing thing done.â
It all adds up to a tough-talking political persona that McSally is undoubtedly happy to present. It probably does reflect her authentic personality. But in the age of Trump in the Arizona GOP, it probably helps her chances to run as a vulgarity-spitting, cocksure candidate. Thatâs especially true because her opponents, Kelli Ward and Joe Arpaio, are trying to paint her as an âestablishmentâ candidate not supportive enough of Trump.
Itâs important to remember the language often distracts from the meaning. The offensive thing about the July comment wasnât necessarily the F-bomb McSally dropped, but the position she was taking. McSally didnât want to quibble over the details of removing a program that gave health insurance to millions â she just wanted to get it done.
Similarly, when she was asked about President Trumpâs comment last week about why we have so many immigrants from âshitholeâ countries, McSally chose to view the question as being about language, not substance.
âI speak a little salty behind closed doors at times as well, so Iâm not going to throw the first stone on using any language,â she told reporters after her announcement.
But that was avoiding the point, which was that Trump had argued we shouldnât accept so many people from poor countries, that, coincidentally or not, are full of brown-skinned people. She avoided that by talking about his language.
So, sure, McSally uses salty language, as she calls it. I expect she will continue to do so publicly as long as she thinks it benefits her. But voters shouldnât let that distract them from the positions sheâs taking, or obscuring.
Poll gives McSally edge over 2 rivals
I reported last week that Joe Arpaioâs entry into the race for Sen. Jeff Flakeâs seat could benefit McSally by splitting the stronger pro-Trump segment of the GOP. A new poll by Data Orbital bears that out.
The live-caller poll of 500 likely voters in the Republican primary gave McSally the lead, with 31 percent favoring her. Arpaio was the favorite of 22 percent, while Ward polled at 19 percent.
McSally even led Arpaio and Ward in Maricopa County, where she had 28 percent, to Arpaioâs 22 percent and Wardâs 20 percent.
Garcia makes lemonade
If David Garcia had won his 2014 race for superintendent of public instruction, he would be running for governor now as a statewide officeholder with a record of his own.
Instead, as he told me last year, heâs running as an outsider candidate in what he hopes is a political era of outsiders. Thatâs taking lemons and making lemonade.
This week, Garcia revealed relatively paltry fundraising of $300,172. That compares to $513,201 for his Democratic rival, Tucsonan Steve Farley. Incumbent Republican Doug Ducey reported $2.8 million.
Via Twitter, Garciaâs campaign said Ducey âhas (around) 1300 big $ donors, almost all of which donated thousands each. Avg donation = $1,900. We have 3,150 donors. Avg donation = $50.33.â
Again, taking lemons and making lemonade. At some point, if Garcia is to become the front-running Democratic candidate people expect, heâll have to stop with the lemons.
CD1 candidate hop
Last week, I mentioned how Kevin Cavanaugh, a one-time candidate for the GOP nomination in Congressional District 1, had instead jumped into the race in Congressional District 8. He had, but now heâs dropped out of both races.
On the Democratic side, a perennial candidate has jumped in to challenge incumbent Rep. Tom OâHalleran in District 1. Miguel Olivas told his hometown Coolidge Examiner that he views OâHalleran as âineffective.â Olivas initiated campaigns in 2012 and 2014 but didnât stay in a race until 2016, when he won 41 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary to OâHalleranâs 59 percent.
Miller wins rare award
Tom Jenney, state legislative director for Americans for Prosperity, gave Pima County Supervisor Ally Miller a âlocal heroâ award for her work on behalf of taxpayers at Tuesdayâs board meeting. The award itself was that rarest of desert creatures: A stuffed jackalope.
Jenney also delivered these five stanza of rhyming verse extolling Millerâs performance as supervisor:
âTwould take too long for here to tally, the things we laud in our dear Ally. Indulge me please and do not rue, as I do list a very few.
âTo spending she would take an axe, and fight against each new sales tax, push for roads and beat down bond, of contracts crony, sheâs not fond.
âIn Star and Weekly she takes her lumps, but blame her not for holes and bumps. Derided much and called a âloon,â but voted not for flame balloon!
âAnd how respond, ye ruling three, to this your buzzing, stinging bee? We hope that you will oft give thanks: for dissenting voice within your ranks!
âAnd so we give this jackalope, and show to Ally sign of hope. We wish her well and best of luck, in future tangles with the Chuck.â



