The Communist Party USA is involved in campaigning on behalf of U.S. Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat from Arizona.
While representing her Phoenix district in recent years, Sinema has portrayed herself as a moderate, even as a slightly conservative Democrat. Sinema, however, is an ardent leftist.
During her term in the Arizona state legislature, for example, Sinema was a founder of the leftist Progressive Caucus. Sinema has helped lead numerous leftist national boards, including the Center for Progressive Leadership, Progressive States Network, and the Democratic Socialists of America-affiliated Progressive Democrats of America (as the only state legislator on the board).
While angering many of her previous progressive colleagues for her willingness to work with Republicans on occasion, some Arizonans attribute her new image more to ambition than ideological conversion.
“I think Kyrsten Sinema is as far to the left as it gets. She is the definition of a modern progressive Democrat. It doesn’t get any further to the left,” Waxelbaum said.
The ‘People’s Movement’
Sinema was a signatory to an advertisement, “May Day and Cinco de Mayo greetings,” placed in the Communist Party USA paper People’s Weekly World, on May 4, 2002.Such ads were traditionally placed in the Communist Party paper every May Day, sponsored by local party clubs, members, or supporters. Almost all signatories could be identified as Communist Party USA members.
Co-signing the advertisement with Sinema were Communist Party USA members Joe Bernick, Jack Blawis, Lem Harris, Lorenzo Torrez, Anita Torrez, Carolyn Trowbridge, Steven Valencia, the Tucson and East Valley clubs of the Communist Party USA, and party fronts the Arizona Peace Council and the Salt of the Earth Labor College.
This support for the communist cause was not a “one-off” or an aberration. In 2003, Sinema again affixed her name to the Arizona Communist Party’s May Day greetings page.
Shortly after her election in 2004, Sinema and former state Rep. Steve May formed Arizona Together, the statewide coalition designed to legalize gay marriage in Arizona.
In the two years leading up to the 2006 election, Sinema was pivotal in raising almost $3 million and enlisting partners for the effort, which succeeded. Arizona became the first state in the nation to reject a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage on Nov. 7, 2006.
“Arizona Together lived up to its name. It was able to defeat 107 because its educational campaign showed working-class Arizonans that this was an attack on working people.”
“Arizona is full of retirees from all over, many who were in school during the Vietnam War period. I can’t imagine they are very threatened by someone who went to peace demonstrations when in college. It also appears that the national Republican practice this fall is every Democratic candidate for governor or Congress is a socialist, communist, radical, far left, and extreme.
The phrase “part of the people’s movement” is often used in communist publications as a dog whistle for “one of us.”
Currently slightly ahead of her Republican opponent Martha McSally, Sinema is favored to prevail in November. Before the election, Sinema needs to face some hard questions about her well-documented past, and current Communist Party ties.