The Norwalk Hour

‘A new movement’: Trump’s false election claims take hold in states

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President Donald Trump’s campaign to subvert the will of voters and reverse his reelection loss to Democrat Joe Biden is taking hold among state and local Republican­s even as it marches toward imminent failure — a demonstrat­ion of Trump’s power to bend the GOP to his will even as he leaves office.

Dozens of state lawmakers, elected officials and party leaders in recent weeks have endorsed and advanced Trump’s false claims, and in some cases called for undemocrat­ic actions to reverse results. None of the moves have had an impact on the election results — and even Republican governors have certified Biden’s win. Still, activists say they see the so-called “stop the steal” campaign as the animating force behind the next wave of Trump-era conservati­ve politics.

“I definitely see a brand new movement taking shape,” said Monica Boyer, a former lobbyist in Indiana and early national voice of the tea party movement. “Was this election stolen? I don’t know. But people have the right to know.”

Signs of the power of that burgeoning political force have been building: In Pennsylvan­ia, 64 Republican lawmakers — including leadership — have signed a statement urging members of Congress to block the state’s electoral votes from being cast for Biden. In Texas, the state’s Republican attorney general has filed a lawsuit to the U.S. Supreme Court demanding that other states’ Electoral College votes be invalidate­d.

Even in liberal Massachuse­tts, five GOP candidates who lost their races filed a federal lawsuit Monday trying to decertify the state’s election results, recycling claims about irregulari­ties and voting machines.

Meanwhile, lawmakers in Michigan, Arizona and Georgia all hosted meetings with Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani where they allowed hourslong airing of grievances over the election as the states certified results for Biden.

To be sure, such efforts have done more to build political support than overturn results. Trump and his allies have lost more than 40 times in federal and state courts. Tuesday is “Safe Harbor Day,” the federal deadline for Congress to accept the electoral votes that will be cast next week and sent to the

Capitol for counting on Jan. 6. Biden has already secured the 270 electors needed to win.

Meanwhile, Trump’s attempts to personally persuade GOP lawmakers, governors and state election officials to intervene have failed.

The president reached out twice last week to Pennsylvan­ia House Speaker Bryan Cutler, a Republican, to press the state’s legislatur­e to replace the electors for Biden with those loyal to Trump. Cutler told him state law prevented such a move, according to a spokesman.

Still, Trump has succeeded in using his unfounded grievances to build political power. The president has already raised more than $170 million since losing to Biden, requesting donations for an “election defense fund.” Most of that will become seed money for his post-presidency political career, going to a Trump-founded political action committee called Save America.

The president has shown he’s willing to attack state Republican­s who don’t back his cause. Trump tweeted Monday that Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who had worried publicly about the spread of election misinforma­tion, was “too dumb or corrupt to recognize massive evidence of fraud“and said he should be replaced.

Duncan replied Tuesday: “Thank you for 4 years of conservati­ve leadership,” adding that Trump had proven that a “business minded outsider can be effective in DC.”

Some Republican groups, including state GOP committees, have grabbed hold of the Trump team’s claims with both hands.

The Arizona Republican Party late Monday appeared to ask supporters to consider dying to keep Trump in office. The state party’s official Twitter account retweeted conservati­ve activist Ali Alexander’s pledge that he was “willing to give my life for this fight.“

“He is. Are you?” the Arizona GOP added.

Some Republican­s have spoken out against Trump’s fight to subvert the results. “It’s completely unacceptab­le and it’s not going to work and the president should give up trying to get legislatur­es to overturn the results of the elections in their respective states,” U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia told the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Toomey has said he does not plan to run for reelection in 2022.

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