Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

The Arizona GOP is attacking a Democrat by tying him to Paul Ryan

Arizona Republican Party via Richard Serlin
Dylan Matthews
Dylan Matthews was a senior correspondent and head writer for Vox’s Future Perfect section. He is particularly interested in global health and pandemic prevention, anti-poverty efforts, economic policy and theory, and conflicts about the right way to do philanthropy.

Rep. Ron Barber (D-AZ) is in one of closest House races in the country. He’s leading in the only recent poll but his Republican opponent — Air Force veteran Martha McSally, the first woman to fly in combat — lost to him by less than a percentage point in 2012, and Republicans are outspending Democrats on TV ads in the district. Derek Willis at the New York Times reports that the race has attracted $9.5 million in outside spending, more than all but two other House races.

The latest GOP tactic in the election is fascinating. The Arizona Republican Party apparently sent out this direct mailer (passed along by Vox reader Richard Serlin) attacking Ron Barber for being too close to … Paul Ryan:

barber mailer

(Arizona Republican Party via Richard Serlin)

The Arizona Republican Party has not responded to repeated requests to verify the flyer is theirs.

It’s important to clarify that the mailer is not attacking Barber for supporting the House Republican budget, which Ryan designed and which is often referred to as the “Ryan budget.” Barber voted against that budget in both 2013 and 2014.

What the mailer is attacking Barber for is supporting a small-bore budget compromise worked out by Ryan and Senate Budget Committee chair Patty Murray (D-WA). Ezra Klein laid out the details of the deal in this blog post (cited in the mailer!) but the gist was that it replaced $85 billion of the budget sequestration, meaning fewer mindless across-the-board cuts.

That said, the mailer actually correct in every particular. The deal did cut pensions for younger veterans. That cut was later reversed through a bill that Barber voted for, but he did support the original one, with veteran cuts (federal workers also saw their pensions cuts, a change that has not been reversed). The deal also failed to reverse a cut to food stamps that took effect on November 1, 2013, and failed to prevent an unemployment insurance expansion supporting 1.3 million people from expiring at the start of 2014. And because it was meant as a small-scale deal to keep the government running, rather than a grand bargain to reduce the long-run fiscal gap, it didn’t touch Social Security or Medicare.

Democrats didn’t like the deal because it was too far to the right and Republicans didn’t like it because it was too far to the left but both sides thought it better than simply letting sequestration grind on. But the specific attack the mailer is making — that the deal didn’t do enough for people on food stamps and that it didn’t help the unemployed — place its message to the left of President Obama and Congressional Democrats. Sure, they would have preferred to extend unemployment benefits, but they agreed to a deal without an extension, and Obama followed this deal up by signing another $8.7 billion in food stamp cuts.

That is to say, the Arizona Republican Party is calling cuts to food stamps, veterans’ pensions, and unemployment insurance “hair-raising for Arizona.” That is … not on message for the Republican Party, given that they support budgets with much deeper cuts to all those programs than Democrats have permitted.

Updated: Serlin also sends along the back of the mailer, which is less politically relevant but also more practical for costume purposes:

ron barber mask

(Arizona Republican Party via Richard Serlin)

More in Labor

Life
What do we do with Cesar Chavez’s memory now?What do we do with Cesar Chavez’s memory now?
Life

A biographer says it’s not enough to reckon with Chavez’s actions. What’s needed is accountability.

By Seth Maxon
Money
Why 2025 was hell for job huntersWhy 2025 was hell for job hunters
Money

It’s a key reason the economy felt so, so bad this year.

By Jordan Weissmann
Future Perfect
Is AI being shoved down your throat at work? Here’s how to fight back.Is AI being shoved down your throat at work? Here’s how to fight back.
Future Perfect

Resistance to exploitative AI starts with building a movement.

By Sigal Samuel
Politics
Trump’s tariffs hurt the working class. Why are some unions on board?Trump’s tariffs hurt the working class. Why are some unions on board?
Politics

The president’s economic policy has put unions in an awkward position.

By Abdallah Fayyad
Labor
College athletes were ready to unionize before Trump’s election. What now?College athletes were ready to unionize before Trump’s election. What now?
Labor

Students are regrouping in their long fight for labor rights.

By Rachel Cohen Booth
Vox’s guide to Donald Trump’s 2024 policies
President Biden blocked the sale of US Steel. Why?President Biden blocked the sale of US Steel. Why?
Vox’s guide to Donald Trump’s 2024 policies

How a consolation prize for unions might screw everyone over — them included.

By Dylan Matthews