Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

RNC chair to step down next month

- STEVE PEOPLES Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Meg Kinnard of The Associated Press.

NEW YORK — Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel will leave her post on March 8, having been forced out of the GOP’s national leadership as Donald Trump moves toward another presidenti­al nomination and asserts control over the party.

McDaniel announced her decision in a statement on Monday morning.

“I have decided to step aside at our Spring Training on March 8 in Houston to allow our nominee to select a Chair of their choosing,” McDaniel said in the statement. “The RNC has historical­ly undergone change once we have a nominee and it has always been my intention to honor that tradition.”

The move was not a surprise. Trump earlier in the month announced his preference for North Carolina GOP Chair Michael Whatley, a little-known veteran operative focused in recent years on the prospect of voter fraud, to replace McDaniel. Trump also picked his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, to serve as committee co-chair.

The 50-year-old McDaniel was a strong advocate for the former president and helped reshape the GOP in his image. But Trump’s MAGA movement increasing­ly blamed McDaniel for the former president’s 2020 loss and the party’s failures to meet expectatio­ns in races the last two years.

In addition to McDaniel, RNC co-chair Drew McKissick said he would also leave.

The leadership shake-up comes as the GOP shifts from the primary phase to the general election of the 2024 presidenti­al contest. While former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley has remained in the race, Trump has won every state in the primary calendar and could clinch the Republican nomination by mid-March.

Haley told reporters in Grand Rapids, Mich., on Monday that the RNC was turning into “Donald Trump’s playpen.”

“The idea that they would be choosing a chair and a director before a primary is a massive control move by Donald Trump,” she said.

Trump cannot make leadership changes without the formal backing of the RNC’s 168-member governing body, but McDaniel had little choice but to acquiesce to Trump’s wishes given his status as the party’s likely presidenti­al nominee and his popularity with party activists. RNC members from across the country are expected to approve Trump’s decision in March.

McDaniel was the the committee’s longest-serving leader since the Civil War. The niece of Utah Sen. Mitt Romney and a former chair of the Michigan GOP, she was Trump’s hand-picked choice to lead the RNC chair shortly after the 2016 election. Her profile as a suburban mother was also considered especially helpful as the party struggled to appeal to suburban women in the Trump era.

While the new leadership structure, effectivel­y a Trump campaign takeover of the RNC, is widely expected to be embraced by members, Henry Barbour, a national committeem­an from Mississipp­i, has been circulatin­g a pair of draft resolution­s — one pushing to keep the committee neutral until Trump is officially the presidenti­al nominee and another that would bar the committee from paying his legal bills.

Lara Trump has suggested that GOP voters would likely want the RNC to cover her father-in-law’s legal bills given that they see the 91 felony counts against him as an example of political persecutio­n. It’s unclear whether the RNC’s 168 members will eventually agree.

 ?? (AP/Alex Brandon) ?? Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel arrives on stage at an event in November 2022, in Washington.
(AP/Alex Brandon) Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel arrives on stage at an event in November 2022, in Washington.

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