Flake's opponents ding the longtime lawmaker for breaking a pledge to serve only three terms in Congress, for paying his wife wages out of his political campaign funds, and for taking overseas junkets, including a week-long trip to Brazil with his wife to learn about global warming.
Critics contend that Flake's anti-abortion stands are anti-woman.
Jamie Peachey
President Bill Clinton and Rich Carmona after a Tempe rally.
AP Photo/Ron Edmonds
President George W. Bush and Carmona during his years as U.S. surgeon general.
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He has opposed federal funding for Planned Parenthood, which provides abortion services, along with a host of other healthcare needs; he helped create legislation allowing employers to exclude healthcare options for female employees, such as contraception coverage; and he voted against a measure that would have made it easier for women to fight wage discrimination.
Alluding to Flake's right-wing notions of late, Carmona says the political support he derives from moderate and conservative voters is "less about me and more about them feeling they don't have a home anymore."
He says that many are "offended that [Flake mirrors the Arizona Legislature in attempting] to legislate women's contraception and women's health rights. They're looking for a reasonable candidate who will support women's issues and women's health. And that's who I am. I think health never should be politicized."
Carmona's 62 years old, 13 years Flake's senior, but he wants to ensure young people that he speaks for them.
"A 20-year-old woman asked me," he recalls, "'Why are [politicians] arguing about whether I can take a birth-control pill when our nation is tanking? Why aren't you spending your time legislating issues that will help with jobs and the economy or make our education system better? [Young adults] want to understand why my generation cares about two guys or two girls living together. Why is that an important political issue?'"
The Senate hopeful answers, "Well, it isn't. Not for me. We should be able to live the way we want to live as long as it doesn't infringe on anyone else."
With early voting under way, Rich Carmona is crisscrossing Arizona in his four-door Chevy Malibu, trying at every stop to convince undecided voters that he will be an independent voice in Washington, despite his Democratic label.
He argues that this "election is about getting reasonable people to the table" to solve the nation's problems.
One of the issues at the top of Carmona's agenda is fixing the country's broken immigration system, and he's not entirely progressive on the subject. He wants to see the DREAM Act adopted, but he also wants the border secured against drug and human smuggling — and he wants a crackdown on businesses that knowingly hire illegal aliens.
The DREAM Act aside, his immigration platform sounds more Republican than Democratic, except that he feathers in a measure of compassion: "We can't split families!" he declares.
Activist Irene Chavez, who attended the Women for Carmona fundraiser in Scottsdale, says, "Fighting for justice in Arizona has been like pushing a huge rock up a hill . . . Now we see a candidate like Carmona running for office, and it feels like real progress."
It's his balanced approach — and his unwavering support for fellow veterans — that attracts even staunch Republicans to Carmona.
Jon Altmann, a Navy veteran and longtime advocate for the military community, knew he would catch hell from fellow Republicans when he endorsed Carmona.
"I'm very aware of what Flake's voting record has been [regarding] us," says Altmann, a onetime Arizona GOP precinct committeeman in Phoenix. "I'm not going to ask my [military] constituency to vote for someone who doesn't have their best interests in mind."
Altmann believes that Carmona's public-service record trounces Flake's time in Congress, which is why the former surgeon general's attracting so many Republican voters.
"Flake has been in Congress for going on two decades," Altmann says, "and people look at career politicians and say, 'What have you done? Have you made it better?' Carmona went to war for my country in a very unpopular war and has spent his life saving lives [as a physician and cop]. He had to work hard for a living, and that appeals to Republicans.
"I've heard vets who are otherwise right-wing Republicans say, 'I'll make the exception, and I'll vote for Rich Carmona.'"
Altmann says Arizona isn't as "far right as Jeff Flake" has become. The polls that show Flake and Carmona in a dead heat (or give Carmona a slight lead) are evidence of the message Arizonans are sending, he says.
Indeed, Carmona says Arizonans are increasingly fed up with Tea Party politics.
"We're here because so many of us are tired of the vitriolic hatred-type of politics that's out there," he says. "Too often, we're all embarrassed by the words that come out of some of our elected officials' mouths."
During the ASU rally for Carmona, Clinton also blasted the political extremists who have commandeered the Republican Party, then offered: "Look, I've got a lot of Republican friends who want to invest in education, and I have a lot of Republican friends who are not anti-immigration. We're just talking about who is in control of their machine right now."
Speaking in favor of Carmona at the women's fundraiser was Lynda Carter, a Phoenix native who starred in the Wonder Woman television series, and Joanne Goldwater, oldest daughter of U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater, the late Arizona conservative icon.