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Club for Growth staffer enters VA Senate GOP primary, targeting Mitch McConnell.

Scott Parkinson says ‘leadership power is too consolidated at the top’

Mitch McConnell and‍ Scott⁢ Parkinson (Getty Images and scottparkinson.com)

The Battle for Senate Races

In several 2024 Senate ​races, the ‌Republican establishment has intervened early to back the candidates it thinks are most viable in a general election—Montana’s Tim Sheehy, West ‌Virginia’s Jim Justice, Nevada’s Sam Brown—potentially against primary challengers backed by the insurgent Club for Growth.

In Virginia, it’s more of a cold war. Neither side has officially offered its ‍backing to a candidate, but if the Club ‍for Growth had to choose, one would guess it would cast its lot with Scott Parkinson, the former Hill staffer who ⁤is now the club’s lobbyist. And if Sen. Steve Daines (R., Mont.), the chairman of the National Republican‌ Senatorial Committee, had his pick, he would probably back Hung Cao, a Navy combat veteran, Vietnamese refugee, and fundraising⁣ powerhouse seen ‌as⁤ a rising star in the Republican Party.

Although a Republican hasn’t won a U.S. Senate race in Virginia in two⁤ decades, Republican governor Glenn‍ Youngkin’s victory in 2021‌ signaled that the party can compete statewide.

Shaking⁤ Up ‍Senate ⁤Leadership

Parkinson, for his part, told the Washington Free ​Beacon last week that leadership power in the Senate “is too consolidated ​at the top.” If he can make it⁤ through a primary to unseat Democratic senator Tim Kaine next year, he wants to use his knowledge of Senate procedure and operations⁤ to weaken the top ⁣brass—currently Senate Minority Leader⁣ Mitch⁢ McConnell (Ky.) on the Republican side—and give more power over votes and agenda-setting to rank-and-file senators.

“When ​you have a legislative body⁢ that‍ includes everyone, ⁣I think you get better outcomes,” ⁤said Parkinson. “Senators want to be a part of⁢ the legislative process, ‌they want to offer amendments, they want​ to be able to have their voice be heard, and not ‌just be told​ [by leadership], ‘Well, you’re not going to get⁢ your ‍vote.'”

Parkinson’s Senate bid comes amid a broader battle between McConnell and‍ Club for Growth, which is backing‍ challengers to GOP leadership-preferred candidates in multiple states. On Wednesday, ​Club for Growth released an ‌ad slamming West ​Virginia’s Justice—who is ⁤running⁤ for Democratic senator Joe Manchin’s seat—as “the establishment’s handpicked candidate” and “McConnell’s man, not‍ West​ Virginia’s.”

A Club for Growth spokesman said “we have not endorsed in the race⁢ and ‍ [have] nothing to announce at this time.” An NRSC spokesman said that it⁤ also “hasn’t‍ weighed ⁣in on the Senate primary ‌in ‌Virginia.”

While the Club for Growth hasn’t⁣ yet backed a candidate in the Virginia Senate race—the endorsement process is ⁣ongoing—Parkinson serves ‍as vice president ​of​ government affairs for the group.

Fighting for Change

Parkinson ‍said he would like to ⁢strengthen the “Breakfast Club,” a small group of gadfly conservative senators opposed to McConnell, and push back against ⁢Republican leadership in a similar way to how the House Freedom Caucus earlier this year forced concessions out of ‌Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.).

“The Freedom ​Caucus meets a lot more frequently, and is more organized,” said Parkinson.⁣ “If I’m elected⁢ senator, I’ve got the ability to bring people together and build coalitions in the Senate.”

Parkinson ‌also wants to fight what he calls “lies from⁤ the cloakroom”—the tactics that party leadership uses to rein in​ members on difficult votes. Parkinson said‍ he saw these tactics for years while working as an aide to three senators and‍ later as chief of staff⁣ to then-representative Ron DeSantis ⁤of Florida.

“They’ll say, ‘Oh, Senator XYZ is dropping his objection, you’re the last senator [holding up the vote],'” Parkinson said. “They’ll say, ‘We can all get out of here five hours ‍earlier ‍if you just lift your​ hold.'”

“When you understand how to confront the lies that are sometimes brought out of ⁢the Senate cloakroom, and use your ‍power as a senator on the floor, they⁣ can’t⁤ stop you,” Parkinson said.

Preserving America’s Values

Senators who repeatedly buck ⁣party leadership‌ tend to⁤ be unpopular in ⁢a chamber that has ⁢traditionally valued collegiality and runs on horse-trading. But ​Parkinson said he doesn’t mind losing friends in the pursuit of⁢ his values, particularly economic freedom and constitutional rights.

“That means objecting, ⁤even when you’re the so-called turd in the punchbowl, and⁤ it’s unpopular,”⁤ he said. “I‌ want to be the voice that⁣ is willing to stand up and be remembered for trying to preserve ‍America, because I think that the constitutional framework that we have is greatly ​threatened by⁤ the left.”



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