New York Daily News

Moderate Elise morphed into pit bull for Trumpism

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T With Denis Slattery

In 2014, upstate New York Rep. Elise Stefanik made history as the youngest woman ever elected to Congress. She was 30.

Her upstart campaign came with a promise that she’d be a free-thinking Republican, open to bipartisan­ship and socially liberal policies. “We are here tonight because you believed that Washington is ready for fresh ideas and a new generation of leadership,” she told supporters at an election night party in upstate Glens Falls on Nov. 4, 2014.

But the Albany native’s political pitch took a sharp turn to the right after Donald Trump crash-landed into the White House.

Since the ex-president’s 2016 election, Stefanik (inset) has undergone a slow but steady political transforma­tion that culminated Wednesday in her becoming the presumed nominee to replace Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney after her ouster as GOP Conference chairwoman, the third highest-ranking position for House Republican­s.

Party leaders picked Stefanik as the only candidate for the No. 3 opening — with a vote expected Friday to seal the deal — because, unlike Cheney, she has devoted herself wholeheart­edly to Trumpism.

To Trump’s delight, Stefanik has amplified his false claim that the 2020 election was rigged for President Biden — even though it influenced a far-right mob to attack the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. The four-term congresswo­man also voted to invalidate Biden’s victory in the immediate aftermath of the riot despite a total lack of evidence of election fraud.

Adding to her Trumpian accolades, she voted against both of Trump’s impeachmen­ts while embracing his combative, liberal-bashing rhetoric, slamming Democrats and feds investigat­ing him as purveyors of a “witch hunt.”

But it wasn’t always that way.

An alum of the George W. Bush administra­tion, Stefanik supported former Ohio Gov. John Kasich in the 2016 Republican presidenti­al primaries, and only begrudging­ly backed Trump after he won the nomination.

Stefanik, now 36, has also largely made good on her original pledge of across-the-aisle cooperatio­n, ranking as one of the most bipartisan members of the past two Congresses in terms of her voting record.

According to CQ Vote Watch, she actually voted with Trump less than 70% of the time in 2019 and 2020 — the seventh-lowest score in the GOP — and opposed his signature 2017 tax cuts, joined Democrats in trying to block him from pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate accord and disagreed with his troop draw-down in Syria.

By contrast, Stefanik has voted with Biden 18.8% of the time since his inaugurati­on, according to a FiveThirty­Eight tracker. Only 20 other Republican­s in Congress have voted with Biden more frequently.

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