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Manzullo Fights in Illinois

Mar 19, 2012

KEENE: Choosing between sheep and rock

               Illinois voters are headed to the polls today and while most will focus on the GOP Presidential primary, at least one other contest that deserves attention.

               Other Republican voters around the country are being forced to choose between two incumbents running against each other after redistricting, but in the newly drawn 16th Congressional District the race between veteran Congressman Don Manzullo and freshman Adam Kinzinger has been one of a kind.

                Manzullo, a ten-term incumbent with the most conservative voting record in his state’s delegation, is being attacked as a man who has “lost his way” by young Kinzinger, who has the support of House Speaker John Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor. Boehner has contributed to Kinzinger and The YG Action Fund, a super PAC run by close allies of Cantor, is running ads calling Kinzinger a “conservative rock in the fight against government spending.”

                Two years ago Kinzinger was a hero of the tea parties and of conservatives in general; today those who were with him then are siding almost unanimously with Manzullo, contending it is not the veteran, but the newcomer who has lost his way. The freshman, from the day he arrived, has demonstrated a penchant for publicity and has emerged as the favored protégé of the House leadership. In the process, claim Kinzinger’ s critics, he has forgotten in just two short years why he was sent to Washington while Manzullo has spent ten terms in  the trenches compiling an enviable record.

                After listening to Boehner’s appeal for votes in a closed meeting of the Republican caucus before the last great spending deal with the White House, Kinzinger described himself not as a “rock,” but as a one of the Speaker’s “sheep,” part of a flock ready to go wherever and do whatever the Speaker wants. This more accurate self-description explains Leadership’s willingness to play loose with the truth in urging Illinois voters to re-elect one of the “Young Guns” recruited by Cantor and California’s Rep. Kevin McCarthy.  

                Manzullo claims he confronted Cantor to ask why the Majority Leader was taking sides in an incumbent vs. incumbent race and was told that it was because he already has a “major investment” in Kinzinger and is going to protect it. That may be understandable, but far less understandable is Cantor’s willingness to go “all in” for a man who is anything but the rock solid conservative described in his Super PAC’s radio ads.

                Kinzinger has attacked Manzullo for voting to increase the debt limit without mentioning that he did the same thing himself or explaining why his support of organized labor and the Davis-Bacon Act has garnered him union support in a race against a conservative. A labor-financed Super PAC, the “Lunch Pail Republicans” has begun running ads for Kinzinger as has another PAC that was active in supporting Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich’s unsuccessful effort to hold onto his seat.

                Manzullo bests his opponent in the rankings of just about every conservative political organization one can name. The American Conservative Union rates him at 96 as compared to Kinzinger’s 72, the Club for Growth scores Manzullo at 85 with Kinzinger at 56, and the National Journal composite conservative score (for those seeking the judgment of a non-conservative source) give Manzullo a 74 and Kinzinger a 58.

                As a result, virtually every conservative organization that endorses candidates has spoken up in favor of Manzullo. The list includes the ACUPAC, the Freedomworks PAC, Illinois Eagle Forum, Illinois Citizens for Life, the Illinois Tea Party and dozens of others.

                Kinzinger, on the other hand has John Boehner, Eric Cantor, organized labor and, finally, the “moderate Republican” Mainstreet Partnership, a group the young Congressman recently joined.

                Kinzinger’s supporters claim … when they aren’t busy distorting the records of the two incumbents … that it’s time for Manzullo to go because he’s too old and been around too long. Manzullo is not flashy, but solid. He knows what he believes and rarely deviates. He follows his leadership when he can, but votes his conscience when he is caught between the demands of party and principle. He may lose today because Kinzinger has the money and support he needs to win, but you cannot predict the votes of men and women who want their representative in Washington to represent them rather than simply follow his party leaders like … sheep.

                Cantor and his allies seem to have lost the ability to distinguish between a rock and a sheep and are simply doubling down on what has turned out to be a bad investment for voters, but a good buy for leaders seeking followers who will be always prepared to do their bidding.

See the Article on the Washington Times Site.