The Daily Courier

GOP will stay neutral should Trump run again

- By STEVE PEOPLES

NEW YORK — The head of the Republican National Committee on Wednesday declined to encourage former President Donald Trump to run for the White House in 2024, saying the GOP would stay “neutral” in its next presidenti­al primary.

In an interview, RNC Chairman Ronna McDaniel also described the pro-Trump conspiracy theory group known as QAnon as “dangerous.”

The national GOP, under McDaniel’s leadership, spent the past four years almost singularly focused on Trump’s 2020 reelection. But should he run again in 2024 — and he has publicly and privately suggested he wants to — the national party infrastruc­ture would not support his ambitions over other prospectiv­e candidates in accordance with party rules, she said.

“The party has to stay neutral. I’m not telling anybody to run or not to run in 2024,” McDaniel told The Associated Press when asked whether she wanted to see Trump run again in the next presidenti­al election. “That’s going to be up to those candidates going forward. What I really do want to see him do, though, is help us win back majorities in 2022.”

Just months removed from the last presidenti­al election, several Republican prospects have already begun jockeying for position for the 2024 contest. McDaniel is far more focused on the 2022 midterms, when Republican­s have an opportunit­y to break the Democrats’ monopoly on Congress.

McDaniel is in a difficult political position as she begins her new term as the national GOP chair.

She has been a devoted Trump loyalist, but as the RNC leader, she is also tasked with helping her party recover from its painful 2020 election season in which Republican­s lost the House, the Senate and the White House. Trump’s fervent base continues to demand loyalty to the former president, even as some party officials acknowledg­e that Trump’s normshatte­ring behaviour alienated elements of the coalition the GOP needs to win future elections.

Tensions are especially high within the party as the Senate prepares for Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial.

Ten House Republican­s voted earlier in the month to impeach the former president for inciting the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, and on Tuesday, five Senate Republican­s voted to move forward with a trial that could ultimately ban him from holding public office ever again.

In the interview, McDaniel called for Republican unity and discourage­d elected officials from attacking other Republican­s — even those who voted to impeach Trump. She declined to single out any specific Republican­s when pressed, however, including Trump loyalist Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., who is travelling to Wyoming this week to campaign against Rep. Liz Cheney, the highest ranking House Republican that supported Trump’s impeachmen­t.

“If we’re fighting each other every day and attacking each other and brandishin­g party purism, we’re not going to accomplish what we need to to win back the House and take back the Senate, and that’s my priority,” McDaniel said.

She also forcefully condemned the pro-Trump QAnon movement, a large group of conspiracy theorists who were a visible presence at the Capitol insurrecti­on on Jan. 6. Trump repeatedly declined to denounce the group while in the White House.

Moving forward, she said that voters, not Trump, are the head of the Republican Party, although Trump continues to maintain “a huge, huge presence” with his base.

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