The Guardian (USA)

Lauren Boebert blames ‘Hollywood elites’ for decision to switch districts

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

The far-right Republican congresswo­man Lauren Boebert has blamed “Hollywood elites” including singer Barbra Streisand and actor Ryan Reynolds for her decision to switch districts ahead of her 2024 re-election campaign.

In an interview on Steve Bannon’s War Room podcast over the weekend, Boebert alluded to how her Democratic opponent Adam Frisch’s campaign had received a $1,000 donation from Streisand in April and a $500 contributi­on from Reynolds in March.

Those sums combine for approximat­ely 0.03% of the $7.7m Frisch’s campaign has raised – compared with his Republican opponent’s $2.4m – since he narrowly lost against Boebert during the 2022 midterm election.

Nonetheles­s, as she has done before, Boebert singled out the donations from Welcome to Wrexham’s Reynolds and Streisand – an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony winner – as evidence that “Hollywood is trying to buy their way into Congress” at her expense.

Boebert said her 27 December announceme­nt that she intended to relocate from Colorado’s third congressio­nal district to the fourth and seek election there was meant to “defend and advance conservati­ve principles”.

“We need a strong voice there, and we have to shut down the Hollywood elites who are trying to buy my current seat,” Boebert said to Bannon, the former Donald Trump White House adviser who is appealing a prison sentence given to him for his refusal to cooperate with the US House committee that investigat­ed the January 6 US Capitol attack.

“It’s coming from Hollywood when you have Barbra Streisand coming in and donating to the Democrat, when you have Ryan Reynolds coming in and donating to the Democrat.”

The Cook Political Report categorize­d the fourth district where Boebert is headed as “solidly Republican”. Its current representa­tive is Ken Buck, who has been a member of the US House since 2015. But Buck said in November that he would not be seeking re-election, blaming his fellow Republican­s’ insistence on lying about how the 2020 election was stolen from Trump in favor of Joe Biden.

Meanwhile, the third district that Boebert – a vocal 2020 election denier – has represente­d since 2021 was categorize­d as a toss-up in a Cook Political Report rating from December. The Cook Political Report changed its Colorado third district rating to “lean Republican” after Boebert announced her switch.

Boebert, 37, won a second term in Congress after defeating Frisch by just 546 votes. The 56-year-old former banker announced in February that he would challenge her efforts to win a third term in Congress during the 2024 election cycle.

When she first revealed her plans to pursue election in Colorado’s fourth congressio­nal district rather than grant Frisch a rematch, Boebert said a “pretty difficult year” for her and her family personally had also factored into her reasoning. She filed for divorce in May from her husband, with whom she has four sons.

About four months later, Boebert landed in scandal after she and a man with whom she was on a date were kicked out of a performanc­e of the stage production Beetlejuic­e in Denver for inappropri­ate behavior, including vaping, recording and groping each other. She later issued a statement of apology, saying: “I simply fell short of my values.”

Among those to criticize Boebert for switching congressio­nal districts was the Republican Colorado state representa­tive Richard Holtorf, who is also running to succeed Buck in the US House.

“Seat shopping isn’t something the voters look kindly upon,” Holtorf said. “If you can’t win in your home, you can’t win here.”

 ?? Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call Getty Images ?? Lauren Boebert retained her House seat in 2022 by just 546 but will contest a district this year that is ranked as ‘solidly Republican’.
Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call Getty Images Lauren Boebert retained her House seat in 2022 by just 546 but will contest a district this year that is ranked as ‘solidly Republican’.

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