San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Internal battle is shaping up for the GOP

- By Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin

As President Donald Trump prepares to leave office with his party in disarray, Republican leaders including Sen. Mitch McConnell are maneuverin­g to thwart his grip on the GOP in future elections.

Meanwhile, forces aligned with Trump are looking to punish Republican lawmakers and governors who have broken with him.

The bitter dispute underscore­s the deep divisions Trump has created in the GOP and all but ensures the next campaign will represent a pivotal test of the party’s direction, with a series of clashes looming in the months ahead.

The friction already is escalating in several key swing states in the aftermath of Trump’s incitement of the mob that attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6.

They include Arizona, where Trump-aligned activists are seeking to censure the Republican governor they deem insufficie­ntly loyal to the president, and Georgia, where a hardright faction wants to defeat the current governor in a primary election.

In Washington, Republican­s are particular­ly concerned about a handful of extreme-right House members who could run for Senate in swing states.

McConnell’s political

lieutenant­s envision a large-scale campaign to block such candidates from winning primaries in crucial states.

But Trump’s political cohort appears no less determined, and his allies in the states have been laying the groundwork to take on Republican officials who voted to impeach Trump — or who merely acknowledg­ed the plain reality that President-elect Joe Biden won the presidenti­al race.

Republican­s on both sides of the conflict are openly acknowledg­ing they’re headed for a showdown.

“Hell, yes, we are,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, one of the 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump.

Kinzinger was equally blunt when asked how he and other anti-Trump Republican­s could dilute the president’s clout in primaries.

“We beat him,” he said.

The highest-profile tests of Trump’s clout may come in two sparsely populated Western states, South Dakota and Wyoming, where the president has targeted a pair of GOP leaders: John Thune, the second-ranking Senate Republican, and Liz Cheney, the third-ranking House Republican.

“I suspect we will see a lot of that activity in the next couple of years out there for some of our members, myself included,” Thune said, adding that he and others would have to “play the hand you’re dealt.”

He may face less political peril than Cheney, who, in voting to impeach Trump, said that “there has never been a greater betrayal by a president.”

The Wyoming Republican Party said it had been inundated with calls and messages from voters fuming about her decision.

Trump has talked to advisers about his contempt for Cheney in the days since the vote and expressed his glee about the backlash she is enduring in her home state.

Privately, Republican officials are concerned about possible campaigns for higher office by some of the high-profile backbenche­rs in the House who’ve railed against the election results and propagated fringe conspiracy theories.

Among those figures are Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Andy Biggs of Arizona.

All three states have Senate seats and governorsh­ips up for election in 2022.

Just as striking, a number of mainline conservati­ves in the House are speaking openly about how much Trump damaged himself in the aftermath of the election, culminatin­g with his role in inspiring the rioting.

“The day after the election, that question of leadership was unquestion­ably in one person’s hands, and each week that has gone past, he has limited himself, sadly, based off his own actions,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., who predicted rankand-file voters would come to share his unease after they fully absorbed the Capitol rioting.

Trump has vowed a campaign of political retributio­n against lawmakers who’ve crossed him — a number that has grown with the impeachmen­t vote.

The president remains hugely popular with the party’s grassroots and most likely is capable of raising enough money to be a disruptive force in 2022.

Scott Reed, the former chief political strategist for the Chamber of Commerce, a powerful business lobby, said Republican­s should prepare for a ferocious internecin­e battle.

Reed, who as an ally of McConnell’s helped crush rightwing populists in past elections, said the party establishm­ent would have to exploit divisions within Trump’s faction to guide its favored candidates into power.

“In 2022, we’ll be faced with the Trump pitchfork crowd, and there will need to be an effort to beat them back,” Reed said. “Hopefully, they’ll create multicandi­date races where their influence will be diluted.”

An early test for the party is expected in the coming days, with Trump loyalists attempting to strip Cheney of her House leadership role.

Should that effort prove successful, it could further indicate to voters and donors that the party’s militant wing is in control — a potentiall­y alarming signal to more traditiona­l Republican­s in the business community.

Kevin McCarthy, the House minority leader, has acknowledg­ed to political donors in recent days that the departing president and some members of his faction have seriously damaged the party’s relationsh­ip with big business, people familiar with his conversati­ons said.

If Cheney is deposed, it could encourage primary challenges against other Republican­s who supported impeachmen­t or censure, including more moderate lawmakers like Reps. Peter Meijer and Fred Upton of Michigan and John Katko of New York, whose districts could slip away from Republican­s if they nominated hard-line Trump loyalists.

But in a sign that Trump can’t expect to fully dictate party affairs, McCarthy has indicated he opposes calls to remove her from leadership.

William Oberndorf, an influentia­l Republican donor who gave $2.5 million to McConnell’s super political action committee, the Senate Leadership Fund, in the 2020 election, said donors should be closely watching the impeachmen­t votes as they formulate their plans for giving.

A longtime critic of Trump, Oberndorf said it had been a mistake for the party not to oust Trump during his first impeachmen­t trial last year.

“They now have a chance to address this egregious mistake and make sure Donald Trump will never be able to run for public office again,” Oberndorf said. “Republican donors should be paying attention to how our elected officials vote on this matter.”

It’s not yet clear how widely the party leadership might embrace a no-new-Trumps strategy, and there are strong indication­s the Republican base might react with fury to any explicit effort to relegate the former president to the political dustbin.

In a vexing complicati­on for Senate leaders, the chairman of their campaign committee, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., has spoken critically of impeachmen­t and opposed certifying Pennsylvan­ia’s election results — a vote that could undermine his ability to raise funds from big donors.

A number of state parties already are controlled by Trump allies, some of whom said Republican traditiona­lists would have to come to terms with their new coalition.

“What President Trump has done has realigned the political parties, and either the establishm­ent of the Republican Party recognizes that, or we don’t — and I believe that we will,” said Rep. Ken Buck, who also is the Colorado GOP chairman.

He suggested the party should be attentive to Trump’s workingcla­ss support and avoid being “hyperfocus­ed on the suburban vote.”

In some respects, the party still might face the same irreconcil­able pressures that have hobbled it the past four years: on the one hand, Trump’s powerful cult of personalit­y on the right; on the other, his deep, personal unpopulari­ty with the majority of American voters.

As appalled as party leaders may be by the president’s conduct, they can’t win general elections if his die-hard supporters stay home or cast protest votes.

On paper, the GOP should stand a good chance of recapturin­g one or both chambers of Congress in the next campaign, since the Democratic majorities are small and the party that holds the White House usually loses ground in midterm elections.

But Republican­s are in a state of extreme disarray in the Sun Belt states that slipped into Biden’s column, and in several large Northern battlegrou­nds like Wisconsin and Michigan, they’re confrontin­g the likelihood of unruly Senate or gubernator­ial primaries.

The last time Democrats controlled the presidency, the House and the Senate, in 2010, Republican­s won the House but failed to claim the Senate because some of their nominees were out of the mainstream.

The divisions may be playing out most acutely right now in the two historical­ly red states that flipped into Biden’s column and elected three Democratic senators this cycle: Georgia and Arizona.

Local GOP establishm­ents are reeling from those defeats, and Trump has battered local leaders with vehement — and false — claims of political perfidy.

Both states have elections for Senate and governor in 2022, offering hard-line Trump supporters a number of inviting targets.

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