Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Michigan GOP chair gets the boot from committee

- JOEY CAPPELLETT­I AND COREY WILLIAMS

COMMERCE TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Michigan Republican­s have voted to remove election denier and state GOP Chair Kristina Karamo during a meeting Saturday after many of the party’s leaders called for her resignatio­n following a year of leadership plagued by debt and infighting.

Nearly 89% of those present voted to oust Karamo, said Bree Moeggenber­g, District 2 State Committeew­oman. About 45 people, not including proxies, attended the meeting.

Karamo did not attend the meeting and has made it clear she will not recognize the vote if removed, claiming the meeting was not official and had been illegally organized. The unfolding situation could set the stage for a court fight to determine control of the highest position within the Michigan GOP.

“She’s been voted out by the state committee,” Bethany Wheeler, a state committee member, told reporters. “If this was a corporatio­n, that’s the board. They’ve now fired the CEO, basically. She can fight it. But the fact of the matter is she was removed by the state committee and now they are in charge.”

Current co-chair Malinda Pego will serve as acting chair until another election for chair is held, Wheeler said

The internal dispute takes place as Michigan Republican­s look to rebound from 2022 midterms in which they suffered historic losses. The party is aiming this year to flip an open U.S. Senate seat while also helping the Republican presidenti­al nominee win the battlegrou­nd state.

Michigan is among several swing states where parties overtaken by far-right leadership have struggled to overcome infighting and money issues. Similar situations have unfolded in Georgia and Arizona, which pose a significan­t issue in the 2024 presidenti­al election where those states are poised to play pivotal roles.

Karamo, a former community college instructor, rose through Michigan’s Republican ranks by spreading election conspiraci­es after the 2020 presidenti­al election. She eventually was backed by former President Donald Trump in her run for secretary of state in 2022, losing by 14 percentage points in a result that she still refuses to concede.

State Committeew­oman Darlene Doetzel voted in favor of Karamo and was angered by Saturday’s vote and the result.

“All they want to do is fight and cause chaos,” Doetzel told reporters. “Chairwoman Karamo was taking the Republican Party in a positive direction. She was trying to have communicat­ion with all of the people in Michigan, no matter what your political status.”

“Let’s call it what it is. It’s all white in there,” Doetzel said of the members voting Saturday. “Let’s not mistake this. You’ve got a Black woman in power, a Christian, and they don’t want that.” Doetzel is white. About a dozen supporters of Karamo also gathered Saturday afternoon outside the small indoor gun-range building in Commerce Township where the meeting was being held.

State GOP Committee member on policy Barry Doherty of Brandon Township said security would not allow him to enter the meeting. Before the vote, Doherty said the gathering was not an officially called meeting of the state Republican Party and any actions taken would not be official.

“We’re here to let people know — other state committee members know — that next week is the meeting that is official that business is conducted and they can bring their grievances to that meeting,” Doherty said.

Doherty said that he and others support Karamo and her stance on election integrity and other issues. “I’m concerned that the people on the inside don’t see that and that good progress that is happening,” he said.

Doherty said some attending Saturday’s meeting are “state committee members and guests.”

“There are other state committee members who are not pleased with Kristina,” he added.

In February, Karamo was elected by grassroots activists alongside her co-chair, Malinda Pego, to lead the state party through the 2024 elections. Less than a year later, Pego signed onto a petition seeking a vote on removing Karamo.

Eight of the state party’s 13 congressio­nal district chairs called on Karamo to resign last week, citing financial instabilit­y stemming from insufficie­nt fundraisin­g and asking Karamo to “put an end to the chaos in our party” by stepping down.

Karamo has refused to resign and promised not to leave if ousted at the meeting, calling the gathering “illegal” in a recent podcast posted on the Michigan GOP website. It’s unclear whether enough party members attended for the Saturday afternoon gathering to be official.

Karamo did not respond to multiple requests for comment by The Associated Press.

 ?? (AP/Joey Cappellett­i) ?? Kristina Karamo speaks to Michigan Republican Party delegates in February 2023 in Lansing, Mich.
(AP/Joey Cappellett­i) Kristina Karamo speaks to Michigan Republican Party delegates in February 2023 in Lansing, Mich.

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