San Diego Union-Tribune

ELECTION DENIERS QUIET AFTER PRIMARY WINS

Many mum on fraud claims they touted after 2020 vote

- BY STEVE PEOPLES & SAM METZ Peoples and Metz write for The Associated Press.

Nevada Republican Jim Marchant insisted there hadn’t been a legitimate election in his state in more than a decade. All of Nevada’s election winners since 2006, he said on a recent podcast, were “installed by the deepstate cabal.”

But when Marchant won the Republican nomination for Nevada secretary of state this week, he immediatel­y celebrated the victory as legitimate.

“I am beyond humbled by the overwhelmi­ng support of our campaign. Nevadans made their voices heard,” Marchant declared on social media.

Such inconsiste­ncy has become a hallmark of election deniers in Republican primary contests across the U.S. in this year’s midterms. Dozens of GOP candidates who sought former President Donald Trump’s backing in Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas and elsewhere have spent months parroting his baseless claims of 2020 election fraud but then declared victory without raising such concerns in their own elections.

Amid such seeming hypocrisy, many Republican candidates are still vowing to pursue a series of election reforms that could make it more difficult to vote — particular­ly for those who traditiona­lly

support Democrats — in the name of election integrity.

Democratic National Committee Chair Jamie Harrison warned that “MAGA Republican­s will do anything in their desperate chase for power.”

“From underminin­g our democracy by spreading Trump’s Big Lie, to laying the groundwork to try to cancel votes when they don’t agree with the outcome, but falling silent if they win, this is today’s Republican Party,” Harrison told The Associated Press.

In Nevada on Tuesday, Marchant was among a slate of election deniers who secured their places on the November ballot without questionin­g the legitimacy of the results. The group included candidates for Senate, state treasurer and a Las Vegasarea congressio­nal seat. That’s even as the majority of counties relied upon Dominion

voting machines, which continue to be the target of conspiracy theories by Trump and his allies.

The phenomenon extends well beyond Nevada.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Republican nominee for governor Doug Mastriano spearheade­d a state Senate hearing in which witnesses aired false claims about mass voter fraud. Mastriano also was outside the U.S. Capitol when a mob of Trump supporters stormed the building during the deadly 2021 insurrecti­on. And he later tried to bring a partisan election audit to Pennsylvan­ia before he was stripped of his committee chairmansh­ip by his own party.

Mastriano made no mention of voter fraud as he declared victory in Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican primary for governor last month.

“God is good,” a smiling Mastriano told cheering supporters.

The Mastriano campaign declined to respond to a question about the apparent double standard.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton also ignored questions about his contradict­ory positions on voter fraud.

Paxton won his fiercely contested primary last month after spending much of the last year championin­g Trump’s bogus claims of election fraud. In the aftermath of Joe Biden’s presidenti­al win, Paxton filed a legal challenge to the election results in four battlegrou­nd states. He asked the U.S. Supreme Court to set them aside and allow the Republican-controlled state legislatur­es to determine the winner.

The high court rejected the challenge three days after the lawsuit was filed.

But after nearly two years of Trump’s constant claims that the election was “stolen,” which have been embraced by hundreds of Republican candidates across the U.S. seeking his support, an extraordin­ary number of Americans have lost faith in the U.S. election system.

Only 45 percent of U.S. adults said they have significan­t confidence that votes in the 2022 midterm election will be counted accurately, and 30 percent have some confidence, according to a February AP-NORC poll. Democrats were much more likely than Republican­s to be very confident, 66 percent versus 24 percent.

 ?? RICARDO TORRES-CORTEZ AP FILE ?? Before his primary victory, former Nevada Assemblyma­n Jim Marchant insisted there hadn’t been a legitimate election in his state in more than a decade.
RICARDO TORRES-CORTEZ AP FILE Before his primary victory, former Nevada Assemblyma­n Jim Marchant insisted there hadn’t been a legitimate election in his state in more than a decade.

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