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Swordsmyth
12-15-2018, 12:06 AM
Sen. Jon Kyl is resigning from the seat he was appointed to less than four months ago following the death of John McCain, Gov. Doug Ducey announced Friday, a development which gives Ducey a second opportunity to fill the position.Kyl, 76, had said he was only committed to serving through the end of the year, although Ducey said he had hoped to persuade him to serve through 2020. His resignation is effective Dec. 31 and forces a pivotal decision by the state's Republican governor.

Ducey said he will pick a replacement "in the near future." His office has been typically tight-lipped about who might fill the seat, leading to frenzied speculation in Arizona and Washington.


Under state law, the governor must appoint a Republican because McCain was elected as a member of the GOP.
The most prominent Republican politician whose name has been floated is Rep. Martha McSally, who just lost a race for the state's other Senate seat to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema last month. A former air force colonel who was mentored by Kyl, McSally has drawn criticism from some Republicans for running a campaign that focused on her closeness to President Donald Trump and tried to portray Sinema as a radical liberal.
Still, McSally only lost the race by two percentage points in a bad year for Republicans, and she's long been seen within the party as a possible senator. Other Republican women whose names have been floated do not have her experience running in competitive elections, especially statewide.
They include Eileen Klein, a former health care executive appointed state treasurer by Ducey last year. She did not run for re-election. Some Republicans have also speculated about an appointment for Barbara Barrett, a former Ambassador to Finland and businesswoman who unsuccessfully ran in a GOP gubernatorial primary in 1994.
Some Republicans have urged the appointment of McCain's widow, Cindy, to the seat. Notably, Ducey did not select her in the weeks after the senator's death, and there remains widespread animosity toward the McCain family from the GOP's conservative base.
One of the most often-mentioned names is Ducey's chief of staff, Kirk Adams, a onetime state lawmaker who resigned from the governor's office on Nov. 26 and whose last day working for Ducey was Friday. Other names that have surfaced include Bill Montgomery, who leads the top prosecutorial office in Maricopa County, the state's largest, and former Rep. Matt Salmon.

More at: https://news.yahoo.com/mccain-replacement-sen-jon-kyl-resigning-end-153236389--election.html

Swordsmyth
12-16-2018, 08:00 PM
Meghan McCain’s husband said that Rep. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., would be an “unwise choice” for Arizona senator.
“McSally strikes me as an unwise choice for a number of reasons,” Ben Domenech tweeted. “She's like an NFL team that plays down to its opponents' level - and she'll be tasked with running for re-election immediately.”


McSally strikes me as an unwise choice for a number of reasons. She's like an NFL team that plays down to its opponents' level - and she'll be tasked with running for re-election immediately. https://t.co/C01s2sL28e
— Ben Domenech (@bdomenech) December 14, 2018 (https://twitter.com/bdomenech/status/1073619827976220672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)




Meghan McCain, daughter of the late Republican Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. and a host of the cable television show The View, retweeted her husband’s comment.
Domenech was responding to reports (https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/14/politics/jon-kyl-resignation-arizona-senate/index.html) that Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey might pick McSally, 52, as Sen. Jon Kyl’s replacement as he steps down from the U.S. Senate at the end of the year. McSally, a former Air Foce colonel and the first American woman to fly in combat (http://https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/defense-national-security/militarys-readiness-problem-not-even-close-to-being-solved-martha-mcsally-says), is retiring from Congress next month after narrowly losing a Senate contest to Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., last month.
Kyl, 76, was appointed last September to replace McCain, 81, who died in office following a battle with brain cancer (https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/john-mccain-war-hero-and-maverick-senator-dead-at-81).
If the McCain family is against a McSally appointment, it could doom her chances of being given the interim position.
It seems that McSally realizes she needs to make amends. Hours after Domenech's tweet, she met with McCain’s widow, Cindy McCain, Friday afternoon, sources told the Arizona Republic (https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/politics/arizona/2018/12/14/jon-kyl-resign-senate-seat-arizona-john-mccain/2309788002/), to apologize for not using her husband’s name at the president’s signing of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 2019.
The Republican sources say that she appreciated McSally’s apology, but the two did not speak directly about the potential Senate appointment during their half-hour meeting.
Sources also told the Washington Post (https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/for-arizona-governor-mcsallys-star-dims-as-possible-choice-for-senate-seat/2018/12/13/866f6cc0-ff0c-11e8-ad40-cdfd0e0dd65a_story.html?utm_term=.50bbe8f20910) this week that the governor no longer has the same enthusiasm he previously had in replacing Kyl with McSally.
Normally under Arizona law, when a Senate seat is vacated, it is filled by a gubernatorial appointment until the state’s next general election. If McSally were to be appointed, she would face reelection in 2020, meaning she would almost immediately mount a reelection campaign after taking office in 2019.
Ducey and Kyl, however, are facing a legal battle (https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/politics/arizona/2018/11/29/arizona-governor-doug-ducey-sued-over-future-john-mccains-senate-seat/2149952002/) that calls for a special election mounted at the end of November.
The lawsuit says that Ducey is in violation of the 17th Amendment and calls for the court to direct the governor to call a special election to fill the seat within six months. It says that an appointee cannot serve for a long period of time instead of someone elected by voters.






https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/congress/mccain-family-turns-on-martha-mcsally