San Francisco Chronicle

Rep. Cheney calls ex-leader ‘dangerous and irrational’

- By Maggie Haberman Maggie Haberman is a New York Times writer.

Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., vice chairperso­n of the House committee investigat­ing the Capitol riot of Jan. 6, 2021, described former President Donald Trump in stark terms Wednesday night as a threat to the republic who had “gone to war with the rule of law.”

“At this moment, we are confrontin­g a domestic threat that we have never faced before — and that is a former president who is attempting to unravel the foundation­s of our constituti­onal republic,” Cheney said in a speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidenti­al Library in Simi Valley, Ventura County, where her address was met with a sustained standing ovation.

“He is aided by Republican leaders and elected officials who made themselves willing hostages to this dangerous and irrational man,” she said, continuing, “Even after all we’ve seen, they’re enabling his lies.”

Cheney is facing a Trump backed primary challenger for her Wyoming congressio­nal seat in August, and the race is widely seen as an uphill battle for her.

Cheney spoke at a moment when Trump is potentiall­y on the verge of announcing a presidenti­al campaign for 2024, according to his advisers, raising the prospect of a front-running candidate in early polls who is also facing active civil and criminal investigat­ions. Trump has also continued to repeat lies about his 2020 election loss, maintainin­g that the contest was “stolen” from him.

“As the full picture is coming into view with the Jan. 6 committee, it has become clear that the efforts Donald Trump oversaw and engaged in were even more chilling and more threatenin­g than we could have imagined,” Cheney said.

Republican­s, she said, “have to choose,” because they “cannot both be loyal to Donald Trump and loyal to the Constituti­on.”

It was a striking commentary from the daughter of a Republican former vice president, Dick Cheney, against the current leader of the Republican Party, even as he is out of office.

Cheney had been a supporter of Trump’s until shortly after the 2020 election, when she criticized him for his baseless fraud allegation­s.

Cheney, who was forced out of her leadership post as the No. 3 Republican in the House last year as she repeatedly excoriated Trump for the events of Jan. 6, has become a fairly isolated presence within a party that remains heavily in thrall of the former president.

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