The Macomb Daily

Mitchell defects from GOP

‘Unacceptab­le to treat election system as third-world nation’

- By David Eggert

LANSING » A retiring Michigan congressma­n said Monday he is leaving the Republican Party and becoming an independen­t to protest efforts to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s victory over President Donald Trump.

Rep. Paul Mitchell, of Dryden, is nearing the end of his second and final term. He wrote a letter to Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy on the same day electors formalized Biden’s win.

“It is unacceptab­le for political candidates to treat our election system as though we are a third-world nation and incite distrust of something so basic as the sanctity of our vote,” he said.

Mitchell, 64, said he voted for Trump despite some reservatio­ns about four more years of his leadership. He criticized GOP leaders for tolerating “unfounded con

spiracy theories” without defending a secure electoral process. He did not join 106 House Republican­s who signed onto a Texas lawsuit — rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court — that sought to invalidate the results in Michigan and three other states.

“I believe that raw political considerat­ions, not constituti­onal or voting integrity concerns, motivate many in party leadership to support the ‘stop the steal’ efforts, which is extremely disappoint­ing to me,” Mitchell wrote. “As elected members of Congress, we take an oath to ‘support and defend the Constituti­on of the United States,’ not to preserve and protect the political interests of any individual, be it the president or anyone else, to the detriment of our cherished nation.”

Mitchell will be succeeded by Republican Lisa McClain of Bruce Township next month, who cruised to election in November’s general election. He was first elected in 2016 after Candice Miller stepped down to run for Macomb County Public Works Commission­er.

A former councilman in St. Clair and one-time candidate for the U.S. House of Representa­tives in midMichiga­n, Mitchell won a hotly-contested Republican primary in August 2016over state Sen. Phillip Pavlov, former state Sen. Alan Sanborn, state Rep. Tony Forlini and Air Force retiree David Van Assche. He easily won the general election that November and went on to win a second term in 2018.

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