Don't believe the attack ads. Here's who Kyrsten Sinema and Martha McSally really are

Opinion: If you're tired of the vitriol on Congress (and all those attack ads on TV), there's something you can do about it.

Editorial board
opinion contributor
Republican Martha McSally (left) who is vying for a U.S. Senate seat for Arizona against Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, speaks with the Arizona Republic editorial board and Arizona Republic reporters as Sinema looks on at the Arizona Republic in Phoenix on Wednesday, October 17, 2018.

Kyrsten Sinema and Martha McSally have been in campaign mask. 

Both U.S. Senate candidates have been wearing false fronts since the primary, and everyone knows it. But Sinema and McSally continue with the fiction, somehow thinking their masks are going to make them look better.

They don’t.

That’s the pity of this race.

All either candidate had to do was be herself –– or, at least, the self both displayed as U.S. House members – and the race would be just as competitive, particularly among independents and moderates. Because the real Sinema and McSally are centrists, accomplished women with moxie and class and the ability to work with people who aren’t like them to get stuff done in Congress.

Is Kyrsten Sinema really a radical?

McSally and other groups have painted Sinema as a tutu-wearing leftist who – repeat it with us, because we know you’ve seen the ad –– was protesting our country while McSally was on a combat mission defending it.

It’s true. Sinema did wear a tutu. She told a Libertarian talk-show host that she had no problem with him joining the Taliban. But she also was one of the few Democratic state lawmakers who was willing to try to work with then-Senate President Russell Pearce, who authored the tumultuous Senate Bill 1070. She also became close friends with former Republican U.S. Rep. Matt Salmon.

People change. They learn and grow. And Sinema’s record in Washington proves it.

More than 60 percent of the bills she co-sponsored this session were introduced by Republicans. She voted just a couple of weeks ago to make some of the tax cuts permanent in last year’s Republican-led bill – making her one of three Democrats to do so.

Sinema sides with Trump’s agenda 62 percent of the time, according to an analysis by the website FiveThirtyEight – less so on social issues than on the economy and defense. But it’s hard to argue that the Sinema of the last few years is some sort of commie – not when Andy Biggs, perhaps one of Arizona’s most right-leaning politicians, votes with Trump only 74 percent of the time.

Is Martha McSally really a hardliner?

McSally’s foes have painted her as a negative hardliner who voted to ruin your health care. Sinema’s campaign even ran an ad claiming McSally voted to cut Medicare, saying, “If she’ll lie about our Medicare, she will lie about anything.” 

For the record, McSally voted in 2017 for a Republican budget resolution that sought to slow cost increases by expanding the role of private insurance in Medicare. But nothing’s actually been cut, and the debate’s out on whether that plan would turn Medicare into a voucher system, as Democrats allege.

McSally does vote with Trump’s position on issues 97 percent of the time. But she is not the ideological hardliner that many make her out to be, and you can see that in how she approaches legislation. Like Sinema, McSally studies issues deeply, works to make compromises within the legislation and, in the end, votes based on whether the bill is better than the status quo.

Perhaps most illustrative of her approach –– and completely lost in the campaign rhetoric on both sides – is how McSally handled Obamacare. She voted for repeal, but when that effort failed, she joined a bipartisan group that offered solutions to shore up the program – and noted in an op-ed that you fight the battle you’re in, not the one you wish you had.

So, who’s best in this race?

If the real candidates had just stood up, making a choice in this race would have been nearly impossible. Because there aren't a lot of stark, black-and-white differences between Sinema and McSally. One has governed from the center-left. The other has governed from the center-right. In an era of hyper-partisanship, that makes both rare –– and valuable.

As the website ProPublica notes in its comparison of their voting records, “It is unusual for two members of different parties to agree on so many votes. Out of 1,043 votes in the 115th Congress, they have agreed on 522 votes, including 118 major votes.”

But the choice becomes clearer if we’re judging the two simply on their campaign performance. Because Sinema has worn the better mask.

Maybe the vitriol of a hard-fought primary got to McSally. But she looked like the smaller person in their only televised debate, repeatedly calling Sinema a liar and, later, a traitor for her decade-old Taliban comments. McSally even sent out a press release saying the penalty for treason was death (though she later clarified that she doesn't mean Sinema should die).

Sinema has stepped over the line at times, too (case in point: that attack ad on McSally’s Medicare record). But McSally has hurled a near-steady stream of attacks against Sinema – and unapologetically so. Because to McSally, this is how you play the game.

It shouldn’t be.

We need to get back to a saner time, when senators didn’t call each other names –– or if they did, they could put it all aside after the vote and go get a beer together. There is too much “us and them” in D.C., and it hurts how we are governed.

The real Martha McSally and Kyrsten Sinema know that. But Sinema is the only one willing to say it (repeatedly) from behind her mask.

Political times call for one over the other

If you have grown tired of the toxic culture that has taken over Capitol Hill; if you long for more collegial leadership focused on solving problems, not settling scores; if you want a federal government that works, not wages constant war; you must send people to Washington who can change it. People who not only talk bipartisanship but determinedly practice it.

There may be no better example of politics by collaboration than Sinema. She literally wrote the book on it – "Unite and Conquer" – in 2009. She leads with an arm extended to the other side and a promise to work together. 

She has traveled a long way from the street-marching activist she once was to the good-natured centrist she now is. 

In a Washington in which rancor and malice are disturbingly normal, Sinema is the antidote. Leaders like her can come from any party, and they are needed more than ever.

That's why Kyrsten Sinema deserves the Senate seat.

This is an opinion of The Arizona Republic's editorial board. What do you think? Send us a letter to the editor.

READ MORE: