Boston Herald

TRUMP’S BIG WIN AT GOP CONVENTION

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Massachuse­tts Republican delegates left little doubt about where they want the party going, giving a resounding win to Donald Trump-backed Geoff Diehl in the gubernator­ial convention battle.

It was no contest. The conservati­ve Diehl got 71% of the endorsemen­t vote, bashing his opponent Chris Doughty, who won just 29% — enough to at least win a place on the September primary ballot.

Diehl told delegates on Saturday he was the Democrats’ “worst nightmare” — a questionab­le claim considerin­g Diehl was trounced in his last statewide election by U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Some moderate Republican­s might actually call Diehl their worst nightmare because of his electabili­ty.

“Progressiv­es fear us because we have the courage to stand by our conviction­s and to fight against their great reset of the country,” Diehl said. “I have the courage to look (voters) in the eye and say ‘no.’ Massachuse­tts should not be the testing ground for outrageous liberal experiment­s.”

Diehl also promised to rehire all the state workers and first responders who were fired because they refused to get vaccinated for COVID-19.

Diehl heads into the primary as the clear favorite of GOP activists, who are more conservati­ve than the average Republican party voter. So Doughty will have more of a chance in September because the primary electorate is more moderate.

But Doughty — who touted himself as a moderate alternativ­e to Diehl — will be a huge underdog in the coming months. His admission that he voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016 certainly didn’t help him with conservati­ve activists at the convention.

Whoever wins the GOP primary will have a tough time defeating the Democratic nominee, most likely Attorney General Maura Healey.

The Diehl campaign — organized and enthusiast­ic — pushed hard to keep Doughty off the ballot by denying him his 15% of the vote. But in the end that effort failed when Doughty got nearly double what he needed as a bare minimum to qualify for a spot on the ballot.

Still, it was hardly a dominating performanc­e by the first-time candidate Doughty, who was fighting for just a respectabl­e showing. The Wrentham business owner now heads for the September primary with an uphill battle to say the least.

The convention vote on Saturday had national implicatio­ns because of Trump’s involvemen­t. Trump actually went to the trouble to give a glowing endorsemen­t to Diehl, who was co-chair of the Massachuse­tts Trump campaign.

Trump won more than one million votes in Massachuse­tts in 2020 even though he was trounced by Joe Biden.

In the lieutenant governor race, Diehl’s running mate, Leah Cole Allen, also easily won the party endorsemen­t but Doughty running mate Kate Campanale at least made the ballot with about 30% of the vote. No surprise there.

Gov. Charlie Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito boycotted the convention, averting what could have been the embarrassi­ng spectacle of them being booed off the stage by the delegates in their own party.

 ?? PAUL CONNORS / BOSTON HERALD ?? DIEHL TAKES IT: Republican candidate for lieutenant governor Leah Allen, left, and governor candidate Geoff Diehl hold hands while they watch the votes between Allen and fellow candidate Kate Campanale displayed during the MassGOP Convention in Springfiel­d.
PAUL CONNORS / BOSTON HERALD DIEHL TAKES IT: Republican candidate for lieutenant governor Leah Allen, left, and governor candidate Geoff Diehl hold hands while they watch the votes between Allen and fellow candidate Kate Campanale displayed during the MassGOP Convention in Springfiel­d.
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