Houston Chronicle Sunday

RNC chair calls for party unity to take back White House

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By Thomas Beaumont and Brian Slodysko

LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Facing a cash crunch and harsh criticism from a faction of far-right conservati­ves, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel on Friday called for the party to unite behind the goal of defeating President Joe Biden.

McDaniel spoke at the RNC’s winter meeting in Las Vegas behind closed doors on Friday, addressing a gathering of state chairmen and other top party members in what’s expected to be a critical swing state in the November election.

“We Republican­s will stick together, as united as the union our party long ago fought to preserve,” McDaniel said, quoting Ronald Reagan, according to people who were in the room and disclosed her remarks on condition of anonymity to discuss a private gathering. “We’ll have our battles ahead of us, but they’re good battles, and they’re worth fighting for.”

McDaniel’s appeal for unity comes as former President Donald Trump and his allies push the party to get behind him and effectivel­y end the primary even though he still faces a final major rival, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley. While McDaniel has fought off opponents before, winning a competitiv­e race for a fourth term as chairwoman last year, she’s now facing Trump supporters on the far right who are creating parallel efforts that could conflict with the national party.

Campaign finance disclosure­s released this week show the RNC had just $8 million in the bank and $1 million in debt. While the Trump campaign heads into 2024 with $42 million cash on hand, Biden’s political operation reported raising $97.1 million across the various committees it uses to fundraise and ended the year with $117.4 million on hand.

Biden is already working with the Democratic National Committee, which partners automatica­lly with the incumbent president. An effort by Trump allies to have the RNC this week declare Trump the “presumptiv­e nominee” was withdrawn after it drew criticism because Haley is still running.

Trump has previously backed McDaniel, though his campaign and the RNC have disagreed at times. Trump declined to participat­e in party-sponsored primary debates before this year’s Iowa caucuses.

But there’s long been tension between the party establishm­ent and some people who consider themselves Trump’s strongest supporters.

McDaniel faced a week of withering attacks launched by far-right figures spearheade­d by the group Turning Point, a glitzy and well-funded organizati­on founded by 30-year-old media figure Charlie Kirk, who was part of an unsuccessf­ul effort to oust McDaniel last year.

Days before the party’s winter meeting convened, Turning Point hosted a counterpro­gramming event and grassroots training session at a casino across Las Vegas Boulevard dubbed “Restoring National Confidence,” a play on the RNC’s initials. The invite-only event drew nearly 400 attendees aligned with the group, including some RNC members, as well as state and local Republican Party chairs.

Kirk, who hosts a popular radio show, is part of a faction of conservati­ves who’ve openly stoked a feud with the RNC, which they have blasted for spending lavishly and being out of touch with the party’s grassroots base. That, they argue, led to losses in 2018 and 2020 as well as underwhelm­ing results in 2022.

Some Turning Point supporters have become RNC members, while the group is actively recruiting others, an effort that, if successful, would give the group more sway over the direction of the party and perhaps a stronger say in the party’s chair.

“We know a pack of losers when we see it: top to bottom, the entire RNC staff in its current form,” Kirk said Thursday on his radio show.

“They don’t even know what winning is,” he added.

Inside the RNC meeting, some members, including those who have been critical of McDaniel, said the Turning Point effort was ill-advised.

“Attacking the brand and the chair doesn’t advance our fundamenta­l goal of winning elections,” said Mississipp­i national committeem­an Henry Barbour, who has at times criticized McDaniel.

And McDaniel’s allies note that the Democratic National Committee was in debt to the tune of $5 million in the early days of the 2020 race, when the party was trying to return a Democrat to the White House.

Turning Point is looking to expand its influence and reach beyond the youth movement, with mixed results. The group has struggled in its adopted home state of Arizona, where many of its preferred candidates failed to win in statewide races that many saw as winnable.

Its leaders have also come under scrutiny over their own spending practices, including charter jet travel, offering lucrative salaries and hosting Kirk’s wedding reception in 2021, which also commemorat­ed the organizati­on’s ninth anniversar­y. Turning Point is currently trying to raise $108 million for a three-state get-out-the-vote campaign in Wisconsin, Arizona and Georgia that would operate parallel to efforts that are already underway.

RNC spokeswoma­n Emma Vaughn dismissed the challenges as coming from people complainin­g online.

“Outside noise might be what keyboard warriors and the Democrats are focused on,” she said. “Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and the entire Republican National Committee are laser-focused on beating Biden this fall.”

 ?? Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press ?? Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel, shown at the Nov. 8 debate, speaks Friday to party leaders in Nevada amid far-right demands to declare Donald Trump the nominee.
Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel, shown at the Nov. 8 debate, speaks Friday to party leaders in Nevada amid far-right demands to declare Donald Trump the nominee.

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