While most of the Republican candidates in
Michigan’s open 7th district race try to position
themselves as the most conservative of the lot, they
all have their eyes trained on a moderate contender.
Almost all of the five candidates playing to the
conservative base in the Aug. 3 primary agree that
their stiffest competition is former state Sen. Joe
Schwarz, who is backed by the Republican Main Street
Partnership — a group that supports moderate
Republicans.
At one point, Democrats, who do not have a strong
contender for the seat, had hoped Schwarz would
switch parties.
“Schwarz is a very formidable challenger,” says
former state Rep. Paul DeWeese, who, like Schwarz,
is a medical doctor running to succeed retiring Rep.
Nick Smith (R).
“Joe Schwarz is the person to beat right now,” state
Rep. Gene DeRossett, another GOP contender, said.
Even attorney Brad Smith, the son of Nick Smith who
tied for first place with Schwarz in the most recent
poll, agreed that Schwarz is the early favorite.
“I think Joe Schwarz is going to be the main
battleground here,” Smith said. “It’s going to be
Joe Schwarz versus a conservative candidate and I am
certainly hoping it’s going to be me.”
To that end, Smith, DeRossett, DeWeese, and state
Reps. Clark Bisbee and Tim Walberg are courting key
Republican groups, such as Right to Life of Michigan
and the National Rifle Association as well as the
Michigan Chamber of Commerce and the Michigan Farm
Bureau.
But as the candidates move around the mostly rural
southern Michigan district, the 800-pound gorilla in
this race is the lingering questions over
allegations Nick Smith made last November after the
House voted late in the night to add a prescription
drug benefit to Medicare.
Smith bucked the Republican leadership and voted
against the bill. Then he said a colleague tried to
buy his vote by promising financial help for his
son’s candidacy if he played ball and retribution
against Brad Smith if he did not.
Smith later modified the allegation but the original
charge is the subject of a pending House ethics
committee investigation into the matter.
“It’s clearly an issue,” DeWeese said. “Wherever I
go, someone brings it up. It’s not a positive factor
for Brad Smith’s campaign.”
DeWeese said Nick Smith should come forward and name
names, while DeRossett said he should at least clear
the air.
“Either Nick Smith was bribed on the House floor by
the Republican leadership and someone committed a
felony or he was pressured heavily and made some
comments that he regretted making later — either he
was bribed or he saw that as an opportunity to raise
money for Bradley and to help Bradley,” DeRossett
said.
Brad Smith scoffed at that notion and said the
matter is under investigation.
“That is preposterous,” he said. “I certainly never
would take something as weighty as this and twist it
— distort the facts in any way — to win the
election,” Smith said. “We wouldn’t do it and we
didn’t do it.”
Walberg said Nick Smith could have handled the
situation better, perhaps by going to House leaders
or even law enforcement officials, but he does not
believe he acted improperly or even unfairly.
“If I were Nick Smith and my son was running for my
seat ... I would do everything legally possible to
help him win,” Walberg said. “I can’t fault Nick
Smith for helping to get his son’s name
identification up, and that’s what he did.”
Brad Smith agrees it helped introduce him to voters
but said that was never the intent.
“I think I got some name recognition out of it, but
I honestly don’t think the results in the poll ...
had anything to do with the Medicare thing,” he
said.
Bisbee said he is not paying much mind to the
matter.
“Most people just shake their heads and say, ‘What
the heck happened?’” he said.
While the candidates try to sort out the Medicare
mess, the immediate goal for most of them is winning
the Michigan Right to Life endorsement, which could
help with fundraising and grassroots troops.
As candidates tabulate their first-quarter takes, a
look at cash-on-hand totals for the end of 2003
showed DeRossett as the leader with almost $276,000
in the bank and Smith with $189,000. Schwarz did not
enter the race until this year.
Right to Life has said it will endorse before the
May 11 filing deadline to encourage those who do not
get the designation to drop out and coalesce behind
one candidate who opposes abortion to take on the
more lenient Schwarz.
For his part, Schwarz says he does not necessarily
support abortion rights but says that the group has
never supported him.
“They always target me,” Schwarz said. “They seem to
favor candidates who are submissive to their
philosophy; I understand that and that’s politics,
but I am not submissive and am perfectly able to
think for myself.”
Schwarz, who ran unsuccessfully for the GOP
gubernatorial nomination in 2002, said he supports
making exceptions in the case of rape, incest and if
the mother’s health is in jeopardy. And he said his
medical background precludes him from seeking to
overturn Roe v. Wade.
“I understand what a horrific situation we were in
with back-alley abortions and ... to think women
would stop having abortions if Roe v. Wade was
overturned is foolish,” he said. “Abortions should
be safe, legal and very rare.”
The notion that his five competitors are
conservatives and he is not irks Schwarz.
“I consider myself a traditional Republican in the
party of Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Teddy
Roosevelt as we knew traditional conservatism ... up
until about 25 years ago,” he said.
That philosophy, along with his military service,
endeared him to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), whose
2000 presidential campaign he spearheaded in
Michigan.
McCain recently mailed a letter to all of his
supporters on behalf of Schwarz seeking donations
for his candidacy.
But Schwarz’s foes question the wisdom of trotting
McCain out on the campaign trail — an opportunity
Schwarz did not seize when McCain was in Detroit
recently. But Schwarz said he would stump with
McCain in the future if and when the Senator’s
schedule allows.
“I think the worst thing he could do is to bring
McCain to Michigan to raise money,” DeRossett said.
McCain damaged President Bush in Michigan,
ultimately winning the primary, which helped hand
the state to former Vice President Al Gore in the
2000 general election, DeRossett charged.
A lot of Michigan Republicans feel the same way and
do not look favorably upon McCain, he said.
While Schwarz can draw clear distinctions between
his positions and the other five candidates’, the
pending Right to Life endorsement could help
separate one candidate from the pack.
So far, Smith and Schwarz are tied at 16 percent
support from GOP voters, according to the poll
conducted March 15-17 by EPIC/MRA of Lansing.
DeRossett got 11 percent, while Bisbee, DeWeese and
Walberg each garnered 10 percent. Twenty-seven
percent were undecided.
Most of the candidates said they would re-examine
their chances if they did not win the anti-abortion
group’s backing.
“I would seriously consider getting out” without the
endorsement, Walberg said.
“I’m not just getting in to be a spoiler,” he added,
stressing that “there are scenarios where I’d stay
in” without the endorsement as well.
DeRossett and Smith both said they will soldier on
regardless.
“I didn’t get into this race a year ago ... to say,
‘Well, OK, if someone doesn’t support me, I’ll drop
out,’” DeRossett said. “I’m in this race to win.”
Smith said he thinks he has a good chance of winning
the Right to Life endorsement as well as nods from
the conservative Club for Growth, the Farm Bureau
and the Chamber of Commerce.
“I’m right in there with all of these groups,” he
said, but “I’m prepared to not get any of these
endorsements and I will not bow out if I get none of
them.”
