The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s just nominated one of the most radical governor candidates in history

- Judd Legum

Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s have nominated state senator Doug Mastriano to be the next governor. Mastriano is one of the most radical gubernator­ial candidates ever to receive a major party nomination.

Many Republican­s have indulged Trump’s claims that Democrats stole the 2020 presidenti­al election. But few have gone as far as Mastriano has to try to justify Trump’s fever dream.

On 25 November, Mastriano “staged a faux legal hearing in Gettysburg, in which Giuliani played prosecutor before a panel of Republican state senators and representa­tives”. Mastriano introduced a number of “poll watchers” who told unsubstant­iated stories of “phantom ballots, hacked machines, and dead voters, which they claimed had all led to an election stolen from Trump”.

Five days later, after all of Trump’s legal challenges had failed and the Pennsylvan­ia secretary of state had formally certified Biden the winner, Mastriano introduced a resolution urging Congress to ignore the official results. His plan was for the Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e to ignore millions of votes and directly appoint electors pledged to Trump.

Ultimately, Mastriano’s resolution didn’t go anywhere in the Republican-controlled state legislatur­e because Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic governor, Tom Wolf, did not yield to demands to call a special session. But Mastriano was not deterred. On 10 December 2020, Mastriano signed on to an amicus brief supporting Texas’s effort to convince the US supreme court to throw out the results in Pennsylvan­ia and several other states. That effort also failed.

In the lead-up to 6 January 2021, Mastriano was reportedly “in regular communicat­ion with Donald Trump”. On the day, Mastriano was at the US Capitol

and was captured on video “walking through police lines with a crowd of people”.

In a statement, Mastriano said that “police lines did shift throughout the course of the day” and he “followed those lines as they existed”. (In February, Mastriano was subpoenaed by the January 6 committee. It is unclear if he complied.)

In July 2021, Mastriano sent a letter “to several counties requesting informatio­n and materials needed to conduct a forensic investigat­ion of the 2020 general election and the 2021 primary”. Mastriano’s conduct, however, was so extreme that he was removed from the process by the Republican leadership of the Pennsylvan­ia senate. The senate president, Jake Corman, said that Mastriano was “only ever interested in politics and showmanshi­p and not actually getting things done”.

During his candidacy for governor, Mastriano has been clear that he will use his power – including his authority to appoint the Pennsylvan­ia secretary of state – to influence the administra­tion of future elections. He said the following on 30 March:

Yesterday, with Trump’s endorsemen­t, Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s put him one step closer to the governor’s mansion.

In April, Mastriano spoke at a far-right Christian conference, Patriots Arise for God and Country, which was organized by “Francine and Allen Fodsick, self-described prophets who have long promoted QAnon”, according to the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. At the outset of the event, organizers played a video “claiming the world is experienci­ng a ‘great awakening’ that will expose ‘ritual child sacrifice’ and a ‘global satanic blood cult’”. The QAnon conspiracy alleges that top Democratic officials and celebritie­s are Satan-worshipers running a secret child sex-traffickin­g ring. The video also featured allegation­s that 9/11 was a false flag, vaccines are “genocide therapy”, and Hitler faked his death.

Last year, the Fodsicks promoted

Mastriano on promotiona­l material for the event, but Mastriano said he would not attend. At the time, a spokesman said Mastriano “strongly condemns the ‘Q anon’ conspiracy theory” and “never committed to speak at this event but sadly was used to help promote it with his picture on the invite”.

Last month, Mastriano attended as a featured speaker, using his remarks to complain about the “persecutio­n and oppression” he was subjected to for contesting the 2020 presidenti­al election. The Fodsicks auctioned a portrait of Trump for $4,000 during the event, with the proceeds going to Mastriano’s campaign. This year, his campaign did not respond to a request for comment by the Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

In a 31 March appearance at the PA Pro Life Coalition, Mastriano said supporters of abortion rights wanted to “wipe out” Black and Latino communitie­s. He said he believed “that’s a baby from Day 1 – at conception”. Mastriano said “my objective, of course, is to save life at conception and not play games”.

In a 27 April debate, Mastriano said opposition to abortion is his “No 1 issue”. The first bill he introduced in the Pennsylvan­ia senate was a “heartbeat” bill – which would ban abortion after six weeks, before many women know they are pregnant. But Mastriano said that, as Pennsylvan­ia’s governor, he would “work our way” toward a total abortion ban from conception. Mastriano made clear that he doesn’t support any “exceptions” to abortion bans for rape, incest or life of the mother.

Mastriano’s position on abortion reflect his Christian nationalis­t worldview. Christian nationalis­m, the New Yorker reports, is rooted in “the idea that God intended America to be a Christian nation”. During his time as a military intelligen­ce officer in Iraq and Afghanista­n he “developed a dim view of Islam”. He has frequently “spread Islamophob­ic memes online”, including “a conspiracy theory that Ilhan Omar, the Democratic congresswo­man from Minnesota, directed fellow-Muslims to throw a five-year-old over a balcony”.

After retiring from the military and successful­ly running for office in 2019, Mastriano “began attending events held by a movement called the New Apostolic Reformatio­n”. Members of the New Apostolic Reformatio­n believe “that God speaks to them directly, and that they have been tasked with battling real-world demons who control global leaders”. (Mastriano says he has not “worked directly” with the group.)

In the legislatur­e, Mastriano has supported a bill that “would have mandated teaching the Bible in public schools and would have made it legal for adoption agencies to discrimina­te against same-sex couples”.”

Judd Legum is the founder and author of Popular Informatio­n, an independen­t newsletter dedicated to accountabi­lity journalism, where this post originally appeared

 ?? ?? ‘Yesterday, with Trump’s endorsemen­t, Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s put him one step closer to the governor’s mansion.’ Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP
‘Yesterday, with Trump’s endorsemen­t, Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s put him one step closer to the governor’s mansion.’ Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP

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