Hartford Courant

Trump bid to shape GOP faces test

Special grand jury selected in Georgia for election probe

- By Steve Peoples

Donald Trump’s postpresid­ency enters a new phase this month as voters across the country begin weighing the candidates he elevated to pursue a vision of a Republican Party steeped in hard-line populism, culture wars and denial of his loss in the 2020 campaign.

The first test comes Tuesday when voters in Ohio choose between the Trumpbacke­d JD Vance for an open U.S. Senate seat and several other contenders who spent months clamoring for the former president’s support. In the following weeks, elections in Nebraska, Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina will also serve as a referendum on Trump’s ability to shape the future of the GOP.

In nearly every case, Trump has endorsed only those who embrace his false claims of election fraud and excuse the deadly U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on he inspired last year.

“The month of May is going to be a critical window into where we are,” said Maryland Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, a Trump critic defending incumbent GOP governors in Georgia, Ohio and Idaho against Trumpbacke­d challenger­s this month. “I’m just concerned that there are some people trying to tear the party apart or burn it down.”

Few states may be a higher priority for Trump than Georgia, where early voting began Monday ahead of the May 24 primary. He’s taken a particular­ly active role in the governor’s race there, recruiting a former U.S. senator to take on the incumbent Republican for failing to go along with his election lie. For similar reasons, Trump is also aiming to unseat the Republican secretary of state, who he unsuccessf­ully pressured to overturn President Joe Biden’s victory.

Meanwhile, a special grand jury in Atlanta was selected Monday for the investigat­ion into whether Trump and others illegally tried to influence the 2020 election in Georgia.

The investigat­ion has been underway since early last year, and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis took this unusual step of requesting the special grand jury to help it along. She noted in a letter to the chief judge that the special grand jury would be able to issue subpoenas to people who have refused to cooperate otherwise.

The chief judge ordered the special grand jury to be seated for a period of up to a year, beginning Monday. Special grand juries focus on investigat­ing a single topic and making recommenda­tions to the district attorney, who then decides whether to seek an indictment from a regular grand jury.

While the primary season will play out deep into the summer, the first batch of races could set the tone for the year.

If Republican voters in the early states rally behind the Trump-backed candidates, the former president’s kingmaker status would be validated, likely enhancing his power as he considers another bid for the presidency. High-profile setbacks, however, could dent his stature and give stronger footing to those who hope to advance an alternate vision for the GOP.

As Republican­s grapple with Trump, Democrats are confrontin­g their own set of revealing primaries.

Candidates representi­ng the Democrats’ moderate and progressiv­e wings are yanking the party in opposing directions while offering conflictin­g messages about how to overcome their acute political shortcomin­gs, Biden’s weak standing chief among them. History suggests that Democrats, as the party that controls Washington, may be headed for big losses in November no matter which direction they go.

But as Democrats engage in passionate debates over policies, Republican­s are waging personal and expensive attacks against each other that are designed, above all, to win over Trump and his strongest supporters.

Florida Sen. Rick Scott, who leads the GOP’S effort to retake the Senate, described the month of May as a brutal sorting period likely to be dominated by Republican infighting instead of the policy solutions or contrasts with Democrats he’d like to see.

“The primaries too often become sort of character assassinat­ions,” Scott said. “That’s what has happened.”

No race may be messier than the Republican primary election for Georgia’s governor. Trump has spent months attacking Republican incumbents Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger. He blames both men for not working hard enough to overturn his narrow loss in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The results in Georgia were certified after a trio of recounts, and they all affirmed Biden’s victory.

Georgia Republican Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Trump critic who is not running for reelection, described Trump’s decision to back former Sen. David Perdue against Kemp an “embarrassi­ng” waste of time that could undermine the GOP’S broader goals this fall.

Duncan predicted Trump would ultimately win some races and lose others this month, but he was especially optimistic about Kemp’s chances to beat back Trump’s challenge.

“If a sitting governor is able to defeat that whole Donald Trump notion by a huge amount — and others down the ticket — I think we’re gonna send a message that it’s gonna take more than a Donald Trump endorsemen­t to call yourself a Republican,” he said.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY ?? Former President Donald Trump arrives for a rally at the I-80 Speedway on Sunday in Greenwood, Neb.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY Former President Donald Trump arrives for a rally at the I-80 Speedway on Sunday in Greenwood, Neb.

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