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Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey is appointing Republican Rep. Martha McSally to the Senate, despite her loss to Democrat Kyrsten Sinema for Arizona’s other senate seat last month.

Regular readers of JimHeath.TV read about this likely scenario first, when we predicted it would happen the day after the November election.

While Sinema will replace Sen. Jeff Flake in January, McSally will replace GOP Sen. Jon Kyl, who is resigning months after Ducey selected him in September to temporarily fill the seat of former Sen. John McCain, who died in August.

“With her experience and long record of service, Martha is uniquely qualified to step up and fight for Arizona’s interests in the U.S. Senate. I thank her for taking on this significant responsibility and look forward to working with her and Senator-Elect Sinema to get positive things done,” Ducey said in a statement.

McSally was the preferred choice of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and other national Republicans who see her resume as the Air Force’s first female pilot to fly in combat as the makings of a strong candidate in an increasingly challenging state, where she’ll have to run in a special election to keep the job in 2020.

But McSally’s loss to Sinema had left some Arizona Republicans skeptical.

And her decision to embrace Donald Trump-style rhetoric on issues like immigration, rather than McCain’s legacy, had led to resistance to McSally from McCain’s camp.

“McSally strikes me as an unwise choice for a number of reasons. She’s like an NFL team that plays down to its opponents’ level – and she’ll be tasked with running for re-election immediately,” McCain’s son-in-law, Ben Domenech, tweeted last week.

Cindy McCain, the late senator’s widow, tweeted a tepid statement after Ducey’s announcement this morning:

After losing to Sinema, it’s not yet clear whether McSally will be seen as a strong enough candidate to keep other Republicans from challenging her in a primary.

Former McCain aide Grant Woods, gun control advocate Mark Kelly and Rep. Ruben Gallego, are among the potential Democratic candidates.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee responded to the announcement on Tuesday with an attack on McSally.

“Why appoint a loser when you could find a fresh face with a better shot in 2020?” DSCC spokeswoman Lauren Passalacqua said in a statement. “That’s the question that will haunt Governor Ducey and the Washington Republicans who installed Martha McSally to a seat she couldn’t earn. “

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