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NYT shines the spotlight on Adam Kinzinger

The drama!

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 26February 16, 2021 8:53 PM

WASHINGTON — As the Republican Party censures, condemns and seeks to purge leaders who aren’t in lock step with Donald J. Trump, Adam Kinzinger, the six-term Illinois congressman, stands as enemy No. 1 — unwelcome not just in his party but also in his own family, some of whom recently disowned him.

Two days after Mr. Kinzinger called for removing Mr. Trump from office following the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, 11 members of his family sent him a handwritten two-page letter, saying he was in cahoots with “the devil’s army” for making a public break with the president.

“Oh my, what a disappointment you are to us and to God!” they wrote. “You have embarrassed the Kinzinger family name!”

The author of the letter was Karen Otto, Mr. Kinzinger’s cousin, who paid $7 to send it by certified mail to Mr. Kinzinger’s father — to make sure the congressman would see it, which he did. She also sent copies to Republicans across Illinois, including other members of the state’s congressional delegation.

by Anonymousreply 1February 16, 2021 4:56 AM

“I wanted Adam to be shunned,” she said in an interview.

A 42-year-old Air National Guard pilot who represents a crescent-shaped district along the Chicago’s suburbs, Mr. Kinzinger is at the forefront of the effort to navigate post-Trump politics. He is betting his political career, professional relationships and kinship with a wing of his sprawling family that his party’s future lies in disavowing Mr. Trump and the conspiracy theories the former president stoked.

Mr. Kinzinger was one of just three House Republicans who voted both to impeach Mr. Trump and strip Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia from her committee posts. During the House impeachment debate, he asked Democrats if he could speak for seven minutes instead of his allotted one, so that he could make a more authoritative and bipartisan argument against the president; the request was denied.

He has taken his case to the national media, becoming a ubiquitous figure on cable television, late-night HBO programming and podcasts. He began a new political action committee with a six-minute video declaring the need to re-format the Republican Party into something resembling an idealized version of George W. Bush’s party — with an emphasis on lower taxes, hawkish defense and social conservatism — without the grievances and conspiracy theories that Mr. Trump and his allies have made central to the party’s identity.

To do so, Mr. Kinzinger said in an interview, requires exposing the fear-based tactics he hopes to eradicate from the party and present an optimistic alternative.

by Anonymousreply 2February 16, 2021 4:58 AM

“We just fear,” he said. “Fear the Democrats. Fear the future. Fear everything. And it works for an election cycle or two. The problem is it does real damage to this democracy.”

Mr. Kinzinger said he was not deterred by the Senate’s failure on Saturday to convict Mr. Trump in the impeachment trial.

“We have a lot of work to do to restore the Republican Party,” he said, “and to turn the tide on the personality politics.”

Mr. Kinzinger now faces the classic challenge for political mavericks aiming to prove their independence: His stubborn and uncompromising nature rankles the very Republicans he is trying to recruit to his mission of remaking the party.

His anti-Trump stance has angered Republican constituents in his district, some of whom liken him to a Democrat, and frustrated Republican officials in Illinois who say he cares more about his own national exposure than his relationship with them.

“There doesn’t seem to be a camera or a microphone he won’t run to,” said Larry Smith, the chairman of the La Salle County G.O.P., which censured Mr. Kinzinger last month. “He used to talk to us back in the good old days.”

by Anonymousreply 3February 16, 2021 4:59 AM

Mr. Kinzinger is unapologetic about his priorities.

“Central and northern Illinois deserve an explanation and deserve my full attention, and they’ll get it,” he said. “But to the extent I can, I will also focus on the national message because I can turn every heart in central and northern Illinois and it wouldn’t make a dent on the whole party. And that’s what I think the huge battle is.”

Mr. Kinzinger has drawn praise from Democrats, but he is not anyone’s idea of a progressive. His campaign website trumpets his longstanding opposition to the Affordable Care Act, and he is an opponent of abortion rights and increased taxes. He first won his seat in Congress with Sarah Palin’s endorsement.

Raised in a large central Illinois family — his father, who has 32 first cousins, ran food banks and shelters for the homeless in Peoria and Bloomington — Mr. Kinzinger was interested in politics from an early age. Before he’d turned 10 he predicted he would one day be governor or president, Ms. Otto said, and he won election to the McLean County Board when he was a 20-year-old sophomore at Illinois State University.

He joined the Air Force after the Sept. 11 attacks and served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Upon his discharge he joined the Air National Guard, where he remains a lieutenant colonel. In the 2010 Republican wave Mr. Kinzinger, then 32, beat a Democratic incumbent by nearly 15 percentage points and, two years later, with support from Eric Cantor, then the House majority leader, ousted another incumbent, 10-term Republican Don Manzullo, in a primary following redistricting.

But Mr. Kinzinger soon became dispirited by a Republican Party he believed was centered around opposition to whatever President Barack Obama proposed without offering new ideas of its own.

“His frustration level has been rising ever since he got to Congress and I think the Trump era has been difficult for him to make sense of and participate in,” said former Representative Kevin Yoder of Kansas, who was one of Mr. Kinzinger’s closest friends in Congress before losing a 2018 re-election bid. When loyalty to Mr. Trump became a litmus test for Republican conservatism, Mr. Yoder said, “that became a bridge too far for him.”

by Anonymousreply 4February 16, 2021 4:59 AM

While Mr. Kinzinger never presented himself as a Trump loyalist, he rarely broke with the former president on policy grounds, but he was critical of him dating back to the 2016 campaign, when he was a surrogate for Jeb Bush.

Mr. Trump was aware of Mr. Kinzinger’s lack of fealty. At a fund-raiser in the Chicago suburbs before the 2016 election, Mr. Trump asked Richard Porter, a Republican National Committee member from Illinois, how Mr. Kinzinger would do in his re-election bid. He didn’t have an opponent, Mr. Porter recalled telling the future president.

Mr. Trump, Mr. Porter said, poked his finger in his chest and told him to deliver to Mr. Kinzinger a vulgar message about what he should do with himself. When Mr. Porter relayed the comment to Mr. Kinzinger during a conversation on Election Day, Mr. Kinzinger laughed and invited Mr. Trump to do the same.

In Illinois, Republicans have been struggling to guess what Mr. Kinzinger’s next move may be. In the interview, Mr. Kinzinger said he’s unlikely to pursue the 2022 nomination for governor or the Senate. Right now, he’s leaning toward running for re-election, but with redistricting looming this fall, it’s unclear how the state’s Democratic-controlled legislature will rearrange his district.

What is clear is that Mr. Kinzinger has found himself on the wrong side of rank-and-file Republicans at home. John McGlasson, the committee member for Mr. Kinzinger’s district, said the congressman had been “insulting with his comments” since Jan. 6.

Republican voters interviewed in the district last week lambasted Mr. Kinzinger for turning on Mr. Trump.

“If you want to vote as a Democrat, vote as a Democrat,” Richard Reinhardt, a 63-year-old retired mechanical engineer, said while eating lunch at a Thai restaurant in Rockford. “Otherwise, if you’re a Republican, then support our president. Trump was the first president who represented me. The stuff he did helped me.”

by Anonymousreply 5February 16, 2021 5:00 AM

Mr. Kinzinger predicted “the hangover’’ of Mr. Trump’s post-impeachment popularity “will kind of wear off.’’

Former Gov. Bruce Rauner (howdy doody looking fuckwit) the last Republican to win statewide office in Illinois, in 2014, said Mr. Kinzinger could find himself a casualty of the bitter schism dividing the party. “The only winners in the war between Trump and Republicans will be Democrats,” Mr. Rauner said. “For some voters, character matters. For most, it doesn’t.”

Mr. Kinzinger said he has little desire to reach out to the loudest critics in his district’s Republican organizations, whom he hasn’t spoken to in years and said hold little sway over voters. The letter-writers in his family, he said, suffer from “brainwashing” from conservative churches that have led them astray.

“I hold nothing against them,’’ he said, “but I have zero desire or feel the need to reach out and repair that. That is 100 percent on them to reach out and repair, and quite honestly, I don’t care if they do or not.”

As to his own future in the party, Mr. Kinzinger said he will know by the end of the summer whether he can remain a Republican for the long term or whether he will be motivated to change his party affiliation if it becomes clear to him that Mr. Trump’s allies have become a permanent majority.

“The party’s sick right now,” he said. “It’s one thing if the party was accepting of different views, but it’s become this massive litmus test on everything. So it’s a possibility down the road, but it’s certainly not my intention, and I’m going to fight like hell to save it first.”

by Anonymousreply 6February 16, 2021 5:01 AM

I still really, really need Adam's hairy cock to punch me in the fart box.

by Anonymousreply 7February 16, 2021 5:01 AM

A nice prostate massage from me will make Adam forget his troubles.

by Anonymousreply 8February 16, 2021 5:04 AM

Lol, r7. I enjoy him, but he had a surprisingly bad showing on Bill Maher Friday. He wouldn't say who he voted for in 2016 (not Trump or Clinton) and admitted to voting for Trump in 2020 despite his horrible record. He was roundly ridiculed.

by Anonymousreply 9February 16, 2021 5:05 AM

Really R9? That was a dumb answer on his part.

by Anonymousreply 10February 16, 2021 5:09 AM

Yeah. He's smart in the way that the only people who like Trump are authoritarians and Trump has no authority anymore. He's going to be dead by 20 2024

by Anonymousreply 11February 16, 2021 5:09 AM

Adam's father was a CEO of faith-based organizations

That's all you need to know

by Anonymousreply 12February 16, 2021 5:18 AM

[quote]He wouldn't say who he voted for in 2016 (not Trump or Clinton) and admitted to voting for Trump in 2020 despite his horrible record. He was roundly ridiculed.

Are you joking??! Then WTF are people praising him? And why is he bashing someone he voted for in November?? I’m starting to think he’s just being an attention whore and likes to flip-flop.

by Anonymousreply 13February 16, 2021 5:30 AM

I bet he has a very hairy asshole.

by Anonymousreply 14February 16, 2021 5:51 AM

Here's the interview from Friday. Maher also makes fun of him for being religious (of course). It was awkward.

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 15February 16, 2021 5:51 AM

Weird. I just watched the interview clip that I posted and it's not the full interview. It cut off the end where he talks about who he voted for. Steve Schmidt even brought it up again later in the panel to criticize Kinzinger.

by Anonymousreply 16February 16, 2021 6:05 AM

If you listened to what Kinzinger had to say for the past several weeks about tRump, you might think — erroneously — that he’s someone who the Dems could work with. But, you would be mistaken. If you heard everything that he’s said and done over the last dozen or so years, you realize that he simply rejects tRumpism as a governing principle for the GQP moving forward. In every other respect he is still a loon.

by Anonymousreply 17February 16, 2021 6:37 AM

Is Adam cut or uncut?

by Anonymousreply 18February 16, 2021 6:42 AM

Kinzinger supported Trump for president in Nov 2020. Why wasn't he disgusted by Trump long before goddamn November? Fuck off Kinzinger. You are a slimy Repig just like the rest of them.

by Anonymousreply 19February 16, 2021 6:53 AM

He’s such an attention whore. Just like a former Illinois congressman...

by Anonymousreply 20February 16, 2021 6:57 AM

r18. Deliciously cut.

by Anonymousreply 21February 16, 2021 7:11 AM

He came off as an attention whore on Bill Maher. Also, IQ challenged. I like that he rejects Trumpism so there is that. Romney is a Dillinger capitalist you don't want in power. He took rejected Trumpism. Big deal. It seems like the bare minimum of integrity to reject Trumpism.

by Anonymousreply 22February 16, 2021 7:27 AM

He looks really good in profile. Looks younger.

by Anonymousreply 23February 16, 2021 7:48 AM

He’s the best looking congressman today. Hands down.

by Anonymousreply 24February 16, 2021 4:05 PM

Opportunistic Kinzinger only turned on Trump, because he sees himself thriving in a non-Trump conservative environment. He realized he can't count on Trump having his back or ever let him rise to the top of the GQP.

The whole family letter thing is fucked up though. When even your own conservative family doesn't support your ambition to become a conservative president one day.

by Anonymousreply 25February 16, 2021 4:10 PM

Because I prefer the GOP weak and crippled, I do not wish Adam well.

by Anonymousreply 26February 16, 2021 8:53 PM
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