Los Angeles Times

GOP leader out in state Senate

Republican­s replace Trump backer Shannon Grove with Santa Clarita’s Scott Wilk.

- By PATRICK MCGREEVY

SACRAMENTO — Just days after tweeting a false claim about this month’s mob storming of the U.S. Capitol, state Sen. Shannon Grove of Bakersfiel­d, a staunch supporter of former President Trump, was replaced Wednesday as the leader of the California Senate Republican­s after having served in the position for two years.

Grove will be succeeded by state Sen. Scott Wilk of Santa Clarita. Her ouster as leader by the Senate Republican Caucus came after two of its 11 seats changed hands in the November election.

“California is facing unpreceden­ted challenges and Senate Republican­s stand ready with solutions,” Wilk said in a statement. “For everyday California­ns there is no greater priority than the pandemic — the health crisis it has created, its economic devastatio­n and educationa­l challenges for our students.”

Wilk, who is expected to take over as leader in the next few weeks, added, “We appreciate and thank Senator Grove for her leadership during an unpreceden­tedly difficult time.”

Grove, 55, said she looks forward to continuing to work with Wilk and the Republican caucus.

“With the start of a new legislativ­e session, I know Senator Wilk will do an outstandin­g job leading the caucus as we face the many challenges that lie ahead,” Grove said in a statement. “It has been an honor to serve as the Senate Republican Leader and fight for California­ns who far too often do not have their voices heard in the Capitol.”

Grove, who once described herself as a “guncarryin­g, tongue-talking, spirit-filled believer,” served six years in the Assembly before her election to the state Senate in 2018. When she was selected as the Senate’s GOP leader in January 2019, she said that she planned to work with Democratic senators on the state’s problems.

An enthusiast­ic supporter of Trump before and after he lost the November presidenti­al election, Grove called him “the greatest of all time” in a recent comment on Twitter, and she retweeted a post alleging voter fraud as the reason for President Biden’s election victory in November.

On Jan. 6, Grove posted then quickly deleted a tweet falsely claiming that the mob that overran the U.S. Capitol that day was led by the leftist movement known as antifa and not supporters of Trump.

Grove was responding to a tweet posted by L. Lin Wood, a Georgia attorney and Trump ally who alleged that a person affiliated with antifa was among those in the hallways of the Capitol after it was breached by a pro-Trump mob as Congress was moving to certify electoral votes.

“Patriots don’t act like this!!!” Grove wrote in her retweet of Lin’s post. “This was Antifa.”

A representa­tive for Grove later said the leader deleted the original tweet because it was not complete and posted a revised tweet saying that the violence in Washington was the “way Antifa behaves” and calling the attack on the Capitol “unacceptab­le and unAmerican.”

Three weeks after the election, when Biden tweeted that Americans should “put away the harsh rhetoric” used during the election, Grove responded, “Oh, I don’t think so,” in a retweet.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP ?? STATE SEN. Shannon Grove in 2018 with Sen. Scott Wilk, now leader.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP STATE SEN. Shannon Grove in 2018 with Sen. Scott Wilk, now leader.

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