Arizona Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters has no shortage of uber-rich friends, a result of his years working with wealthy Silicon Valley bros — like billionaire right-winger Peter Thiel — who’ve gotten fat off the tech industry.
Given that, you’d think Masters’ campaign would be flush with cash from donors eager to fund someone who’s their ideological kin. But that isn’t the case. And in a sign of widespread disbelief in his campaign, recent reports indicate GOP donors have been passing the bill on funding Masters’ quest to oust incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly.
Last month, I wrote about the National Republican Senatorial Committee drastically cutting its ad spending this fall for Masters and other GOP Senate candidates who’ve struggled to gain traction. The list also included Donald Trump-backed Senate candidates Ron Johnson in Wisconsin and Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania.
Since then, things have only gotten worse for Masters. In recent weeks, as his poll numbers have remained stubbornly low, he and his campaign have wiped information about his stances on abortion and the 2020 presidential election from his website, and he has leaned into racist, right-wing rhetoric in the months before Election Day.
That’s not helping him gain votes or donors at this critical juncture in his campaign — a campaign that could determine which party controls the Senate for the next two years. The Washington Post reported last week that Masters’ billionaire buddy Thiel and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky have been going back and forth, haggling over who ought to fund Masters’ campaign.








