Astronaut on mission to win second Arizona Senate seat


Published:
2020-10-24 02:01:31 BdST

Update:
2024-04-26 21:34:03 BdST

Published: 2020-10-24 02:01:31 BdST

International Live: From the International Space Station to Congress? Astronaut Mark Kelly is leading an unlikely political “mission” to win a second Senate seat for the Democrats in the traditionally conservative state of Arizona.

Until recently, few would have thought it possible for the Democratic Party to make major inroads in this southwestern state with a long Republican tradition.

But thanks to changing demographics and growing discontent with President Donald Trump among the state’s moderate conservatives, Kelly believes he can win the upper-house seat while helping deliver Arizona’s electoral college votes for Joe Biden.

Kelly, who served 25 years in the US Navy and with NASA, is drawing significant attention not just for his background and the boost he could give Biden’s presidential bid, but because victory would give Arizona two Democratic senators for the first time in six decades.

His opponent is Republican incumbent Martha McSally, also a military veteran, who was appointed by Arizona’s governor last year after the death of John McCain.

McSally lost a bid for a full term in the state’s other Senate seat in 2018 to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema — the first Republican upper-house loss in Arizona since 1988.

“Unlike the federal government, the International Space Station can’t just shut down when people don’t get along,” he writes. “And when you’re orbiting the Earth at 25 times the speed of sound and bad stuff starts to happen… you can’t dismiss ideas based on the politics of the person offering them.”

The message is intended to appeal to moderate voters in Arizona, and contrasts sharply with McSally’s rhetoric, which hews closely to President Donald Trump’s polarizing style and tries to paint Kelly as a radical agent of the left.

“She did that in 2018 and lost and there’s not a lot of reason to think that getting so close to him now is going to help,” he told the Arizona Republic newspaper.

He has also called for stricter gun controls, a cause he embraced after his wife — former congresswoman Gabby Giffords — survived a gunshot wound to the head during a 2011 assassination attempt.

Boosting the Democrats’ chances of courting moderate voters in Arizona is the state’s other senator, Sinema, who is “one of the few bipartisan heroes left that we have” in the upper house, Woodall adds.

“The Kelly campaign is bringing out a lot of Democratic voters, and we’ve had a huge increase in the number of Arizonans registering as Democrats in recent months,” University of Arizona associate professor of politics Samara Klar.

“There’s going to be a lot of people who come out to support Kelly and end up voting for Biden as well.”

 

Dhaka, 23 October (campuslive24.com)//ait


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