PRESCOTT VALLEY — ''Let's win not clash'' said a sign posted outside a meeting of Arizona Republicans as candidates for governor tried to win over the party's most ardent supporters inside.
The message channeled frustration from a decade of ideological infighting and eroding power in a state where Democrats have been gaining ground. But even as Republicans struggle to regain control, they may once again put forward a candidate in the general that's favored by the party's hard-right flank, a strategy that's been a losing formula in recent statewide elections.
U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, a former U.S. House Freedom Caucus chairman representing a deep red district, is the frontrunner in the July primary because he carries the backing of President Donald Trump and the youth conservative organization Turning Point USA. His opponent is U.S. Rep. David Schweikert, a budget hawk who repeatedly has fended off Democrats in his competitive and wealthy purple district.
Whoever wins will face Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs, who defeated Trump-backed Kari Lake four years ago and is now running for a second term.
Although some Republicans may want their party to rally behind a different type of candidate this time, longtime consultant Paul Bentz said it's less likely.
"The folks that have bemoaned the takeover of the party, the people who wish to go back to the more traditional Republican ways, aren't the folks that show up at the precinct committee meetings, aren't the folks that go knock on doors and aren't folks that have showed up at rallies,'' Bentz said.
The Republican establishment has shifted in Arizona
Arizona has long been a crucial state for the Republican Party. It was home to Barry Goldwater, a longtime senator who became one of the nation's most influential conservatives. He was succeeded by John McCain, who served in the Senate for more than three decades.