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Mark Brnovich can blame himself for his U.S. Senate free fall


Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich speaks to a crowd of Republican voters at the party's primary debate for the U.S Senate in Phoenix on June 23, 2022.

When the story on Arizona’s 2022 election is written, surely one of the sorriest chapters will be the collapse of Mark Brnovich.

A year ago, Arizona’s attorney general looked to be the Republican Party’s best shot at reclaiming the Senate seat that Republicans had held since 1969 – until voters sent appointed Sen. Martha McSally packing in 2020.

He was the best known candidate in a crowded Republican field and savvy enough (or so I thought) not to repeat the mistakes of McSally, who lost – twice – because she tied herself too tightly to then-President Donald Trump.

In the end, Mark Brnovich faced one obstacle he couldn’t overcome:

Mark Brnovich.

“He kept trying to court a portion of the electorate that was never going to be his,” longtime Republican strategist Chuck Coughlin told me.





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