Los Angeles Times

California GOP leaders in a tight spot on election claims

- By Maya Lau and Laura J. Nelson

To U. S. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, the general election was a resounding success for his party.

“Not one Republican incumbent lost,” McCarthy said during a news conference last week.

Except, of course, President Trump.

Now, more than two weeks after the election and several failed attempts to overturn it, the Bakersfiel­d Republican still refuses to accept Trump’s defeat.

And closing ranks right behind him: the entire Re

publican delegation of elected leaders in California.

Their reactions range from enthusiast­ic support to quiet acquiescen­ce. Some adopt a triumphant tone, like Shannon Grove, the state Senate minority leader, who tweeted images comparing Trump to Moses f ighting a battle, saying she still believes the president will serve for “the next 4 years.”

Rep. Tom McClintock, of Elk Grove, took aim at mailin voting during a House f loor speech this week, calling it, without evidence, a “corrupted process” that allows ballots to be sent to “untold numbers of people who have moved or died.”

Most state Republican­s, however, have remained silent, refusing to offer an explanatio­n of their views even when asked. Of the nearly two dozen GOP members of the U. S. House of Representa­tives and the state Senate contacted by The Times, only Rep. Doug LaMalfa ( R- Richvale) and incoming member Darrell Issa ( R- Vista) agreed to an interview. None have publicly congratula­ted Presidente­lect Joe Biden, and several have amplified Trump’s unfounded claims of widespread election fraud.

Few would explain their contradict­ory stance, in which they claim that the presidenti­al balloting was corrupt while at the same time claiming their own elections were legitimate.

The motivation­s for failing to support the outcome of the election may be chalked up to politicall­y expedient posturing in the face of a potential Trump backlash, experts say, even among officials who are secretly yearning for the day they can abandon him.

Ron Nehring, the former chair of the California Republican Party, said he believes that while most Republican officials privately accept that Biden won, they “go where the voters are” when it comes to their statements, or lack thereof.

“Republican lawmakers are giving the president the benefit of the doubt as he pursues whatever recount and legal options are available to him,” Nehring said. “He is the president and the leader of the party, and they are giving him the room to exhaust the options that are available to him.”

But critics, including former Republican­s and election experts, roundly condemn the politician­s, saying their actions represent a vivid display of how far right the party of Ronald Reagan has drifted.

“They have f locked together in their cowardice in the House and Senate for the past three or four years, so the fact that they remain in that formation isn’t surprising,” said Reed Galen, who has worked on campaigns for George W. Bush, John McCain and Arnold Schwarzene­gger and is a cofounder of the Lincoln Project, a political action committee of Republican operatives striving to unseat Trump.

The election results are not in serious dispute. Senior Trump administra­tion officials from multiple federal agencies have said the election was the most secure in American history, and election officials from both parties in battlegrou­nd states have said the vote was free of widespread fraud or irregulari­ties.

But with Trump’s ongoing defiance, political experts say, California Republican­s face three unappealin­g options: Echo false claims of voter fraud and undermine democratic norms; risk angering voters and party leaders by refuting Trump’s claims or con

gratulatin­g Biden; or say nothing as the president’s stream of misinforma­tion casts doubt on the integrity of the election.

That political calculus is especially tricky for California Republican­s who won back congressio­nal seats from Democrats and must now f igure out how to negotiate their relationsh­ip with Trump as they enter the Biden era. In deep- blue California, those victors may see their constituen­cies shift after the state draws new district maps next year.

One of the candidates who f lipped a seat in Orange County, Young Kim, has braved criticizin­g Trump in the past, condemning his use of the term “kung f lu” and opposing his administra­tion’s separation of families at the border.

The other congresswo­man- elect to unseat a Democrat there, Michelle Steel, has aligned herself with Trump, greeting him at the airport when he visited California in 2018 and downplayin­g the prevalence of COVID- 19 and the importance of mask- wearing while serving as chairwoman of the Orange County Board of Supervisor­s. Kim and Steel did not respond to requests for comment.

Republican­s are leading in two additional races — one in northern Los Angeles County and the other in the Central Valley — that are too close to call.

For those in deep- red districts, anything less than complete support for the president is unthinkabl­e, experts say. It’s a matter of political survival.

“There is no small amount of self- preservati­on. Do they really want to come out and say something against Trump, or come out and tell the truth, and risk the ire of Trump, or Trump Jr., or Marjorie Taylor Greene ?” Ga lens aid, referring to the congress womanelect from Georgia who said face masks to prevent the spread of COVID- 19 are “oppressive” and has supported the conspiracy movement QAnon.

The refusal to accept an election could set a bad precedent for the U.S ., which is the world’s oldest democracy but has never experience­d challenges to an election on such a scale, political experts say. The allegation­s of widespread voter fraud with virtually no evidence could undermine public confidence and set the stage for a further erosion of democratic norms.

“If the losers claim without evidence that they’ve only lost because they have been rigged out of victory, then it suggests that the next time around, maybe those who say they were cheated had better commit fraud as well because there are no rules,” said Larry Diamond, an expert on democracy and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n and at Stanford University’s Freeman Spogli Institute for Internatio­nal Studies.

Diamond said he’s worried not only about those who openly defy democratic norms, like Trump, but also those who are silent in the face of the attacks.

“You never see a breakdown in democracy without

a good bit of spineless semiloyal behavior on the part of actors who ought to know better,” Diamond said.

So far, McCarthy’s actions have paid off in Washington, even though some of his colleagues have viewed his tight alliance with Trump as a potential liability. He won reelection unopposed as House Republican Leader this week after his party’s strong showing in the House.

That showing included the election of two Republican Congress members who have expressed support for QAnon. The platform’s followers believe the world is controlled by a ring of Satan-worshippin­g pedophiles, including prominent Democrats, who are plotting against Trump. McCarthy, who last week welcomed the lawmakers to the House Republican delegation, did not agree to an interview.

Former congressma­n Issa, who was reelected to Congress this month after a two- year hiatus, said it’s “only fair” for the president to pursue all possible legal remedies in determinin­g the outcome.

“Just as Vice President Al Gore took 36 days to concede, and did not do so until he had exhausted all his appeals, I believe Trump has a right to his days in court. I would stand by anybody’s decision to do so,” Issa said, referring to the contested race between Gore and George W. Bush in 2000.

The 2000 election hinged on 537 votes in one state, Florida. Biden is leading by tens of thousands of votes across multiple states that

Trump is contesting. Election studies show that recounts, on average, change vote tallies by only a few hundred votes. Issa said his own margin of victory — around 28,000 votes equaling a nearly 8- percentage- point lead — was wide enough that he was not concerned that the outcome was in question.

Grove, the state Senate minority leader, tweeted several congratula­tory notes for fellow Republican­s, and has retweeted messages raising questions about voter fraud. One post from Nov. 10 said: “Are we really supposed to believe that Donald Trump f lipped precincts in Beverly Hills California but couldn’t hold on to Erie County Pennsylvan­ia?”

Melissa Melendez, a state senator representi­ng parts of Riverside County, went on the attack against Democrats: “We all know what you’re doing. We are not going to let you cheat and steal this election,” she said on Twitter the day after the election.

A spokeswoma­n for Grove did not provide a response to questions posed by The Times. Melendez’s communicat­ions director said her “schedule doesn’t permit” her to speak with a reporter about her views.

The Sacramento Bee slammed Grove, Melendez and LaMalfa in an editorial, writing that they must “admit reality, stop spreading divisive lies and respect the will of the voters.” Refusing to acknowledg­e the election results, the editorial board said, will “lead their party deeper into the fever swamps of absurdity.”

Rep. Devin Nunes ( R- Tulare), long a Trump loyalist, has offered a relatively muted take on the results. In an appearance on “Lou Dobbs Tonight” on Fox Business Network last week, Nunes evaded several questions from Dobbs about why Republican­s weren’t doing more to defend Trump in his election fight.

At the end of the sevenminut­e interview, Nunes asserted that several states were still “way too close to call” and said Democrats were performing a “wellchoreo­graphed play” to “cover” up the outcome.

A representa­tive for Nunes did not return requests for comment.

LaMalfa said he’s not ready to accept the election results. He conceded that “it might all be a long shot,” but that Trump has a “very skinny” path to victory.

LaMalfa just won reelection to the House, and said he trusts that he was elected legitimate­ly because “the large cities are known for corruption” but his more rural area is not.

‘ You never see a breakdown in democracy without a good bit of spineless semi- loyal behavior on the part of actors who ought to know better.’ — Larry Diamond, senior fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? HOUSE MINORITY Leader Kevin McCarthy ( RBakersfie­ld), center, is among the Republican­s who have been vocal in their support for President Trump.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press HOUSE MINORITY Leader Kevin McCarthy ( RBakersfie­ld), center, is among the Republican­s who have been vocal in their support for President Trump.
 ?? Mark Wilson Getty I mages ?? REP. DEVIN NUNES ( R- Tulare), here waving at President Trump a day after his acquittal on two articles of impeachmen­t, has offered a relatively muted take on the results of the recent presidenti­al election.
Mark Wilson Getty I mages REP. DEVIN NUNES ( R- Tulare), here waving at President Trump a day after his acquittal on two articles of impeachmen­t, has offered a relatively muted take on the results of the recent presidenti­al election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States