The Guardian (USA)

Republican ‘big lie’ supporters triumph in sign of Trump’s enduring power

- Lauren Gambino

Republican candidates who questioned, denied and challenged the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election won a string of consequent­ial primaries in Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina this week, a testament to the enduring power of Donald Trump’s voter fraud myth, which continues to animate the hard-right movement he started.

In a campaign season dominated by angst over the economy and frustratio­n with leadership in Washington, several hard-right candidates successful­ly channeled conservati­ve grassroots momentum, and are now in striking distance of positions that will have enormous influence over voting and elections administra­tion in battlegrou­nd states across the country.

Democrats, meanwhile, who face a grim electoral outlook dampened by Joe Biden’s dismal approval ratings, chose to elevate candidates who more closely reflected the party’s base, with progressiv­es on the verge of growing their ranks in Congress.

Though not yet complete, the results from Tuesday’s highly anticipate­d election night delivered a composite portrait of a Republican party still in Trump’s thrall, even in races where his chosen candidate came up short.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Republican­s nominated Doug Mastriano, a hard-right election denier who was a key figure in the efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election in his state. He attended and helped organize Trump’s “Save America” rally in Washington on January 6 that preceded the deadly insurrecti­on at the US Capitol, and has been subpoenaed by the House panel investigat­ing the assault.

Mastriano’s victory sets up a highstakes showdown with Josh Shapiro, the state’s Democratic attorney general. Should Mastriano prevail in November, he would be in charge of one of the most contested states in the country – one in which the governor appoints the secretary of state, who in turn oversees the election.

During his campaign, Mastriano embraced elements of Christian nationalis­m, staking out controvers­ial positions on issues such as abortion, LGBTQ rights and public health mandates. In one debate, he suggested he would oppose any exceptions to an abortion ban, including in cases involving rape or incest. Shapiro has cast himself as a defender of abortion rights, an issue that is expected to play a key role in governor’s races this fall should the supreme court strike down Roe v Wade, as is anticipate­d.

In his victory speech Tuesday night, Mastriano lashed out at media outlets and commentato­rs who referred to him as “extreme”.

“They like to call people who stand on the constituti­on far-right and extreme,” he said. “Forcing your kids to mask up, that’s extreme. Forcing healthcare workers to lose their job for not getting a jab. It’s extreme when you shut down businesses in our state.”

In the marquee Senate race, the Trump-backed celebrity physician, Mehmet Oz, was neck-and-neck with the former hedge fund chief executive

David McCormick, with nearly all of the vote tallied. The conservati­ve commentato­r Kathy Barnette had fallen far behind and was out of contention for the nomination.

During the campaign, the candidates competed to claim the Maga mantle. Both Oz, who touted Trump’s endorsemen­t, and McCormick, who is married to the former Trump administra­tion official Dina Powell, struggled to animate the former president’s loyal base, and spent millions of dollars of their personal war chests attacking each other in one of the most expensive intra-party brawls of the cycle.

That apparently left an opening for Barnette, who enjoyed a last-minute surge in the polls. Despite her Maga bona fides and endorsemen­ts from Trump’s allies, the former president warned voters that she was unelectabl­e.

In response to doubts about the strength of her candidacy, Barnette said: “Maga does not belong to President Trump.”

In North Carolina, the scandalpla­gued first-term congressma­n Madison Cawthorn lost his re-election bid despite Trump urging supporters to give the 26-year-old Maga firebrand a “second chance”. He was beaten by Chuck Edwards, a state senator who offered a record that was every bit as conservati­ve but without the celebrity. It was a sharp fall for Cawthorn, once viewed as a rising star in the Maga universe, and a rare win for the Republican party’s old guard, which aligned against him.

Trump’s choice for Senate, the North Carolina congressma­n Tedd Budd, also triumphed. Trump’s early endorsemen­t of the little-known House Republican reshaped the race, elevating a candidate who objected to the certificat­ion of 2020 election results in two states. He beat out the state’s former governor, Pat McCrory, who refused to say the 2020 election was stolen.

Budd now faces the former state supreme court chief justice Cheri Beasley

for the seat being vacated by the retiring Republican senator Richard Burr. If elected, Beasley would be the southern state’s first Black senator if elected.

Trump’s choice in Idaho also came up short, failing to unseat the state’s Republican governor, Brad Little. Janice McGeachin, the state’s far-right lieutenant governor, who twice attempted a power grab while Little was out of state, had made Trump’s false claims of a stolen election a central plank of her candidacy.

While much of the focus was on Trump’s influence over his party, Tuesday’s results tested Biden’s appeal among the party’s base. In Oregon, a progressiv­e challenger, Jamie McLeodSkin­ner, appeared on track to unseat the congressma­n Kurt Schrader, a seven-term incumbent with a reputation for breaking with his party. Schrader was the first candidate Biden endorsed this cycle, and his loss would be a major victory for the progressiv­e movement.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Congressma­n Conor Lamb, an avowed centrist from the Biden wing of the party who won difficult races in Trump country, lost handily to the state’s lieutenant governor, John Fetterman, an iconoclast­ic progressiv­e with blue-collar appeal.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvan­ia state representa­tive Summer Lee, running for an open House seat, appeared to have overcome a wave of money from outside groups aiming to counter the progressiv­e movement. If she wins the primary in the solidly Democratic district, Lee would be on track to become the first Black woman to represent Pennsylvan­ia in Congress.

“Our victory shows that we can overcome the billionair­e class that wants to divide and conquer us all with fear and lies-for-profit, if only we come together across our difference­s for a positive vision of multiracia­l democracy,” Lee wrote on Twitter after declaring victory on Tuesday night. “We can have nice things, if we fight.”

 ?? Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP ?? Doug Mastriano, who won the primary contest for governor in Pennsylvan­ia. Mastriano was a key figure in the efforts to overturn the election in his state.
Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP Doug Mastriano, who won the primary contest for governor in Pennsylvan­ia. Mastriano was a key figure in the efforts to overturn the election in his state.

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