Kyrsten Sinema will run for Senate in 2024 as independent

Arizon’s ex-Democrat Sen. Kyrsten Sinema will reportedly run for Senate in 2024 as an independent — setting the stage for a potential three-way race in the Grand Canyon state.

Sinema, who’s yet to announce her 2024 campaign but left the Democratic Party and filed to run as an independent in December, will forgo the Democrat and GOP nomination process as she seeks re-election, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The report was based on pictures of a slideshow mapping a moderate 2024 run — apparently taken at a shared workspace in Phoenix, where the Senator and her team met to discuss the next steps.

According to pictures of two slides obtained by The Post, Sinema may not have yet discussed her plan with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) or the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, leaving both scrambling to back another candidate in a tight race.

“A three-way race in Arizona is a nightmare scenario for Democrats. Schumer’s hold on a slim majority is getting weaker every day,” one national Republican strategist told The Post.

Sinema, 46, plans to have a baseline poll, opposition research and focus group feedback finished by Sept. 30.

Her full campaign staff and 2024 polling schedule are set to be completed by Dec. 31.


Sen. Kyrsten Sinema will run for re-election as an independent in 2024, according to a report.
REUTERS

Another slide presents Sinema’s campaign message as the “independent voice for Arizona.”

“As Arizona’s senior senator, she’s committed to ignoring partisan politics, shutting out the noise and delivering real results helping everyday Arizonans build better lives for themselves and their families,” the slide states.

The centrist senator’s decision could open the way for both Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) and failed Arizona GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake to enter the race unopposed.


slides are pictured
According to pictures of slides, Sinema may not have discussed her plan to run with Democrats.

Another slide presents Sinema’s campaign message as the “independent voice for Arizona.”

Offices for Sinema and Schumer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The DSCC also didn’t immediately comment.

Sinema has apparently cozied up to GOP donors at events in the past year by mocking her former colleagues as a bunch of “old dudes … eating Jell-O.” 

“Old dudes are eating Jell-O, everyone is talking about how great they are,” she said at one reception in Washington, DC, according to Politico.


Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.) has yet to be endorsed for the Senate in 2024 by Democrats.
AP

“I don’t really need to be there for that. That’s an hour and a half twice a week that I can get back.

“I spend my days doing productive work, which is why I’ve been able to lead every bipartisan vote that’s happened the last two years.”

Sinema still caucuses with Democrats and often casts deciding votes to pass legislation with the party’s razor-thin 51-49 majority in the Senate.


Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Sinema passed key Democratic legislation through the Senate last Congress.
AP

Along with fellow centrist Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), Sinema helped pass President Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure deal.

She has also been a staunch defender of the Senate filibuster, which both Biden and Schumer have called to be abolished.

“It’s our job to keep that pressure so that we stay right in the middle of public policy, protect the critical middle part of our country,” Sinema said at a farm bureau event with the Arizona Chamber of Commerce on Thursday, according to The Journal.

A February poll by OH Predictive Insights found Gallego ahead of Sinema and other Republicans in at least eight potential match-ups — four of which showed Sinema running as an independent.


Failed 2022 gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake is one potential GOP frontrunner for Senate.
AP

The DSCC hasn’t yet endorsed Rep.Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), though its chairman, Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.) told The Journal the lack of an endorsement is standard practice at this point in the year.

“It’s early, we haven’t been endorsing in races,” he said.

Lake, a former TV anchor and far-right candidate who lost the 2022 Arizona governor’s race, is the likely Republican frontrunner if she enters the race, despite embracing allegations of election fraud in her race and the 2020 presidential election.

To get on the ballot, Sinema must gather more than 40,000 signatures from nonaffiliated voters by the end of April. 

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Republicans call for Gov. Katie Hobbs’ press secretary to be fired for ‘vile tweet’ invoking gun violence

A group of Arizona GOP state lawmakers have called for the immediate firing of Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs’ press secretary over a tweet invoking gun violence against “transphobes.”

Hobbs spokeswoman Josselyn Berry posted the offending tweet on Monday, just hours after Audrey Hale, who was transgender, shot and killed three adults and three children inside a Nashville Christian elementary school

The tweet included a GIF from the 1980 movie “Gloria,” showing a woman brandishing two handguns. 

“Us when we see transphobes,” Berry captioned the image in the tweet. 

“Less than 12 hours after the tragic shooting in Nashville by a deranged transgender activist [Hobbs’] Press Secretary calls for shooting people Democrats disagree with,” the Arizona Freedom Caucus tweeted on Tuesday


Josselyn Berry posted the disturbing tweet just hours after the deadly shooting.
LinkedIn

Many lawmakers are calling for Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs’ spokesperson to be let go of her duties over the tweet.
AP

The group of conservative Republican state lawmakers added that Berry should be fired over the social media post.

“Calling for violence like this is un-American & never acceptable. [Berry] should be fired immediately,” the GOP group added, noting in a follow-up post that Berry’s “vile tweet encouraging violence” had not been taken down after millions of views and widespread condemnation. 


Josselyn Berry’s tweet included a woman brandishing two handguns from the 1980 movie “Gloria.”
joss_berry/Twitter

Hobbs’ office did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment. 

It is unclear if Twitter will take action against Berry’s account.



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Trucker in Arizona records creepy ghost-like figure: Dashcam video

A truck driver’s dashcam video showing a mysterious figure appearing on the side of an empty road in Arizona has viewers discussing the possibility of a supernatural occurrence.

William Church, a truck driver who reportedly drove down Arizona State Route 87 on Saturday, March 11, noticed a bright glare in his dashcam, and he thinks the flashing figure could be a ghost, according to FOX Television Stations.

The suspected specter was spotted at around 2:30 a.m. local time while Church passed the highway’s 200-mile marker, which is located between Phoenix and Payson, Arizona.

Church told FOX Television Stations there were no other cars on the road.

He thinks the translucent figure looks like a person “just standing in the roadway.”

“You can see the lines through the legs making the figure,” Church continued.

The six-second clip was captured on a Nexar dashcam, which is designed to record drives for security reasons. 

Fox News Digital reached out to Nexar for comment.

Arizona State Route 87 is a north-to-south highway that was constructed in 1927 and measures approximately 272.66 miles.

The north end travels to State Route 264 near Second Mesa, a census-designated place in Arizona, while the south end travels to Interstate-10 near Picacho, an unincorporated community and census-designated place in Arizona.

Many fatal car accidents have happened on the 96-year-old highway, which has reportedly led some locals to believe the road could be haunted.

Valley Chevy Dealers in Phoenix named State Route 87 as one of Arizona’s “most dangerous roads” for its beeline-like route that has “a lot of looping turns.”

A recent fatal car crash happened on Arizona State 87 near milepost 201 in early February, according to FOX 10 Phoenix.

The two-vehicle collision resulted in the death of one person near Bush Highway, which is east of Fountain Hills, a town in Maricopa County.

FOX 10 Phoenix reported that the cause of the crash was not known at the time.

Viewers who have seen Church’s video on YouTube claim they’ve seen a lot of supernatural activity on Arizona highways and in other public spaces.

“They’re out there,” one YouTuber commenter wrote on Monday, March 13, with four shocked face emojis.

“I don’t think it’s glare,” another commenter shared. “It’s too centralized on one spot. Spooky Spooky!”

“Yep saw it …yeah it does have a most definite ghostly appearance,” another user wrote. “That’s for real I think.”

Other YouTube commenters have theorized that the unknown roadside figure could be a hitchhiker, an animal, a tumbleweed, a reflected road sign or a trick of some source of light.

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Teddy Von Nukem from 2017 Charlottesville rally dies before drug trial

The man who appeared in one of the most haunting images from the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia shot and killed himself before standing trial over federal drug charges, according to reports.

Teddy Von Nukem died more than five years after a viral image showed him and others holding tiki torches during an ugly demonstration that descended into violence, the Daily Beast reported.

He was reportedly supposed to appear in Arizona federal court for drug trafficking charges on Jan. 30, but skipped out on the first day and instead shot himself outside his home in Missouri.

The autopsy report, obtained by the Daily Beast, indicated suicide notes were found at the scene for both authorities and his children.

“However handwriting is somewhat inconsistent,” the coroner’s report says.

Von Nukem, 35, was among hundreds that attended the rally on Aug. 12, 2017 that included various white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups, and led to the death of counter-protester Heather Heyer.


Teddy Von Nukem is seen wearing black among other protesters.
Getty Images

Von Nukem denied he was part of any extremist groups that helped organize the “Unite the Right” rally, but was a Donald Trump supporter, according to a Springfield News-Leader report from back then.

“The rally was not a racist rally,” he claimed in 2017. “It was a rally to save our history.”

“I don’t mind showing solidarity with them,” Von Nukem added, arguing white people were at a disadvantage in current society.

Von Nukem can be seen in a photo wearing a black shirt with a tiki torch in hand, according to Tuesday’s News-Leader report.


Neo Nazis, Alt-Right, and White Supremacists march through the University of Virginia Campus with torches in 2017.
Getty Images

Von Nukem was allegedly involved in federal drug trafficking and set to stand trial over it, according to the News-Leader.

He tried to cross into the US from Mexico in 2021 with 15 kilograms of pills that tested positive for fentanyl, the indictment alleges. While he denied knowing the drugs had fentanyl, he admitted to attempting to smuggle in the contraband, the indictment states.

His obituary says he was a married father of five who “enjoyed visiting with people, talking to strangers, meditating, video games and board games, but most of all he loved dancing with each of his daughters every evening when he came home from work,” the News-Leader reported.

“Some people knew Ted and understood he was a different type of fellow and had different views of things, but he would give the shirt off his back if you asked or needed it,” the obit reportedly went on to read.

It appeared that the obit was pulled off the funeral home’s website Tuesday evening. 

After Von Nukem was a no-show at his federal trial, the judge issued an arrest warrant, but when it was discovered he was dead, the case was dismissed, the Daily Beast reported. 

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Arizona’s top election official demands probe into Kari Lake over published voter signatures

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes is calling for an investigation into Kari Lake’s release of voter signatures on social media, accusing her of potentially violating state law. 

“I am writing today to ask you to investigate and take appropriate enforcement action against Kari Lake for potential violations of Arizona law committed under her Twitter handle,” Fontes, a Democrat, wrote in a letter to state Attorney General Kris Mayes sent on Monday. 

Fontes argues that Arizona law “prohibits posting any information derived from voter registration forms or precinct registers to the internet” and no one other than the voter or an authorized person may reproduce a voter’s signature.  

“A violation of this provision is a Class 6 felony,” Fontes writes. 

Lake, a Republican and former local TV news anchor who was defeated by Democrat Katie Hobbs in Arizona’s 2022 gubernatorial contest, posted the 16 signatures from 2020 ballots in a Jan. 23 tweet where she claimed they were part of a “bombshell discovery” of allegedly mismatched signatures that should not have been counted.

Despite losing the Arizona race by more than 17,000 votes, Lake has refused to accept the results of the election. 


Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes wants an investigation into Kari Lake for possible violations of her releasing voter signatures on social media.
Getty Images

She has appealed a December ruling by an Arizona judge who found there was no clear or convincing evidence of misconduct in the 2022 election and affirmed Hobbs’ victory.

Lake also held a “Save Arizona Rally” in Scottsdale on Sunday where she referred to Hobbs as a “squatter in the governor’s office.” Former President Donald Trump called into the rally and declared it “a shame what happened” during the November election, adding that “ultimately she’s going to be victorious.” 

In December, Lake dodged significant monetary sanctions after a judge rejected pleas by Hobbs to find the Republican liable for more than $500,000 in attorney fees. Arizona Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson however did rule that Lake must pay $33,000 for the expert witnesses hired by Hobbs in defense of her Nov. 8 election victory.



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Biden worsening ‘root causes’, gov’t agencies failed Paul Pelosi and other commentary

Border watch: Biden Is Worsening ‘Root Causes’

“Critics with regional expertise say Biden administration policies . . . have severely worsened” poverty, crime and political instability in Mexico and the Southern Triangle — his administration’s alleged “root causes” of immigration, reports RealClearInvestigations’ James Varney. How? “The torrent of people moving across the region has delivered billions of dollars to the coffers of human smuggling rings and the drug cartels.” Reports also suggest “more than two-thirds of those making the trek had been victimized by criminals and nearly one-third of the women had been sexually assaulted.” That’s why one expert sees the surge in traffic as something close to an international crime and places “a lot of blood on the hands” of Team Biden “for opening the Southern border on purpose.”

Iconoclast: Dems’ ‘Pro-Democracy’ Morass

Democrats’ message — that only one party in this election is committed to democracy (theirs), and thus there’s only one real choice — “makes little sense,” even if you reject their agenda and record on issues like inflation, crime and immigration, Josh Barro rants at Very Serious. That message “amounts to telling voters that they have already lost their democracy,” and if you insist to voters they “have no choice but you, you had better make yourself a palatable choice — otherwise, they are liable to defy you and choose what you claimed was unthinkable.” Yet “Democrats have not governed” that way. So: “You can see from [Dems’] actions that they are not actually serious about the arguments they’re making now, and I for one am sick of the disingenuous speechifying.”

Libertarian: GOP Should Govern Like Adults

If Republicans win the House and Senate, they’ll face “enormous challenges”: recession, inflation, debt and deficits “as far as the eye could see” — and more, warns Veronique de Rugy at Reason. How can they address them? First, make inflation a “top priority”: Congress and the White House “must trim government spending,” with Republicans avoiding “bloated ‘family friendly’ programs” like child tax credits and paid leave — which studies show “make the lives of families harder.” They should also resist the urge to “pressure [Federal Reserve] chairman Jerome Powell to stop jacking up” interest rates. Oh, and “govern like adults” — and not seek “revenge” by launching probes against Democratic foes. “Investigating the Dems is not on the top of most voters’ concerns this election season.”

From the right: Gov’t Agencies Failed Paul Pelosi

President Biden’s depiction of the assault on Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul Pelosi, “ignores the multiple ways that government agencies who have the responsibility to prevent, deter, or quickly intervene in crimes such as this failed in their duties,” huffs National Review’s Jim Geraghty. The intruder who “attacked Paul Pelosi overstayed his visa and had resided illegally in the U.S. for many years.” Pelosi might have been spared the assault “if there were better enforcement of immigration laws,” had his attacker “been deported back to Canada years ago,” if the city and state had better “intervention for those with severe mental-health issues” and if US Capitol Police had “been watching the surveillance monitors.” Government agencies clearly “failed in their responsibility to protect the public.”

Eye on elex: Blake Masters’ Final Sprint

“Less than one week from Election Day,” notes the Washington Examiner’s Selena Zito, “36-year-old venture capitalist-turned-candidate” Blake Masters “has gone from a long shot at best to within the margin of error” against incumbent Dem Sen. Mark Kelly in Arizona. Why? “Democrats’ failure to recognize earlier how angry voters are about the economy, crime, and the border.” Plus, his age: “I’m a whole generation behind, and I actually know what it’s like to be raising a family under current conditions,” notes Masters. Zito adds that Masters has now joined “dynamo” gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake “on the stump,” and it’s helping his numbers. So the race is being closely watched: “If he flips this seat, Masters will almost certainly enter a Republican majority in the upper chamber.”

— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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3 suspects arrested after Phoenix mom killed in shooting with children in car

Three suspects linked to the shooting death of a Phoenix mother who was inside a car with her children have been arrested, authorities said Monday.

The shooting happened near an Arco gas station at 27th Avenue and McDowell Road in Phoenix early Monday, FOX10 Phoenix reported.

The mother was killed while in the passenger seat and shrapnel hit one of the children, who was expected to be OK, police said. Five children and two adults survived the shooting.

The victim was identified as 35-year-old Yenni Dominguez Leyva.

Responding officers arrived at the shooting scene and found weapons and arrested three people, including two teens. 

The adult was identified as 19-year-old Martin Ramirez-Contreras.

Police told the station that it was unclear why the suspects opened fire on the car and that the suspects and victim were unknown to each other.

The victim and the children were heading home when the shots were fired.

Police said that it was unclear why the suspects opened fire on the car and that the suspects and victim were unknown to each other.

The victim and the children were heading home when the shots were fired, police said.

“Somebody minding their own business, doing what they’re supposed to be doing, gunned down in the midst of living everyday life, is just the extra amount of tragedy that we see,” Phoenix Police Sgt. Phil Krynsky said.

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