The Republicans’ Black Candidate

Published in Corriere della Sera
(Italy) on 12 May 2022
by Massimo Gaggi (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Laurence Bouvard. Edited by Michelle Bisson.
Supported by a rainbow coalition — from former Trump strategist Steve Bannon to the Club for Growth, which has, in contrast, broken with Trump — Kathy Barnette is her party's nightmare: she could be a surprise win in the primary only to run aground in the November election.

The U.S. Republicans' certainty of winning in the November midterms is marred by the risk of losing some of their conservative colleagues if they put forward a candidate who is too extreme or untrustworthy. Many such cases are beginning to emerge, generally linked to a desire to avenge Donald Trump and determined to replace members of Congress not aligned with his positions with those who are more faithful and more radical. But there are still other anomalies, and those involving the Senate, where the majority hangs on a single seat, are more concerning — such as Eric Greitens, trailed by scandal in Missouri but still leading in the polls. The thorniest issue, however, is Pennsylvania, in the race to replace retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey.

Businessman and military veteran David McCormick seemed certain to win the Republican nomination, until Trump decided to cut him off and give his blessing to surgeon Dr. Mehmet Oz, a well-known TV personality who is little loved by Pennsylvania conservatives. Oz has been pro-abortion and in favor of gun control in the past.

While the two battle it out, attacking each other with mutual accusations, Kathy Barnette, a Black woman on the extreme right, has gained ground as she tells an incredible story in a TV commercial. Born to a 12-year-old mother, Barnette discovered as an adult that she was the product of rape. But she fought back: a military career, a family, a renewed sense of balance. It's a moving story, and with conservative America galvanized by an imminent Supreme Court ruling that could make abortion illegal, her ratings have risen from 5% to 25% days before the primary — higher than ratings for McCormick, slightly less than those for Oz.

It would be a wonderful tale of political renewal were it not that Barnette's biography is hazy on the details (nobody knows where she comes from, where she taught, where she lives; there is no information on her military career), while she has littered social media with invectives against Muslims and accusations of systemic racism by white people.

Unexpectedly supported by a rainbow coalition — from former Trump strategist Steve Bannon to the Club for Growth, which has, in contrast, broken with Trump — Barnette is her party's nightmare. She could be a surprise win in the primary, only to run aground in the November election, unpalatable even to some of the moderate right.


La candidata nera
per i repubblicani

di Massimo Gaggi | 12 maggio 2022

Sostenuta da una variopinta coalizione – dall’ex stratega di Trump Steve Bannon al Club for Growth che, invece, ha rotto con Trump – Kathy Barnette è l’incubo del suo partito: potrebbe spuntarla a sorpresa alle primarie salvo poi arenarsi nelle elezioni di novembre
La certezza dei repubblicani Usa di vincere, a novembre, le elezioni di mid term è corrosa da un tarlo: il rischio di perdere alcuni collegi conservatori perché viene presentato un candidato troppo estremo o inaffidabile. Di casi simili ne stanno emergendo diversi, in genere legati al desiderio di vendetta di Trump, deciso a sostituire i parlamentari non allineati sulle sue posizioni con altri più fedeli, e più radicali. Ma ci sono anche altre anomalie e quelle del Senato, dove la maggioranza si gioca su un seggio, preoccupano di più: come Eric Greitens che in Missouri si trascina dietro diversi scandali ma è ugualmente in testa nei sondaggi. Il caso più spinoso, però, è quello della Pennsylvania dove va sostituito il senatore Toomey, repubblicano, che si ritira.
La nomination della destra sembrava certa per il finanziere e veterano dell’esercito David McCormick fino a quando Trump non ha deciso di scomunicarlo e di dare la sua benedizione al chirurgo Mehmet Oz, star televisiva molto nota ma poco amata dai conservatori della Pennsylvania: in passato è stato pro aborto e contro la libertà di armarsi. Mentre i due litigano e si demoliscono con accuse reciproche, ha preso quota Kathy Barnette, una donna nera di estrema destra che racconta in uno spot tv una storia tremenda: partorita dalla madre quando aveva 12 anni, ha scoperto da adulta di essere nata da uno stupro. Ma ha reagito: una carriera militare, una famiglia, un equilibrio ritrovato. La storia commuove e, con l’America conservatrice galvanizzata dall’imminente sentenza della Corte Suprema che potrebbe mettere fuori legge l’aborto, il suo 5% nei sondaggi è passato, a pochi giorni dalle primarie, al 25%: più di McCormick, poco meno di Oz. Sarebbe una bella storia di rinnovamento della politica se non fosse che la biografia di Kathy è piena di aspetti oscuri (non si sa da dove viene, dove ha insegnato, dove risiede, non dà notizie sulla sua carriera militare) mentre sui social ha seminato invettive contro i musulmani e accuse di razzismo sistematico nei confronti dei bianchi. Improvvisamente sostenuta da una variopinta coalizione – dall’ex stratega di Trump Steve Bannon al Club for Growth che, invece, ha rotto con Trump – Kathy è l’incubo del suo partito: potrebbe spuntarla a sorpresa alle primarie salvo poi arenarsi nelle elezioni di novembre: indigesta anche per parte della destra moderata.

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