The Guardian (USA)

Michigan Republican­s move to oust conspiracy theory-touting chair

- Alice Herman

Michigan Republican­s are on the verge of ousting their party’s conspiracy theory-touting chair after a tenure marred by financial collapse and internal feuds that have at times turned into physical altercatio­ns.

Kristina Karamo, the Michigan Republican party chair, an election-denying activist who won a hard-fought race for the position last year, is facing a likely vote to fire her at a special meeting convened by concerned party leaders on Saturday.

“She has failed as a leader,” said Bree Moeggenber­g, a state committee member who called for the Saturday special meeting to vote on Karamo’s removal. “She has failed to build a bigger coalition of Republican­s, and instead, she has disenfranc­hised many, including those who don’t specifical­ly agree with her.”

Anger over the chair’s leadership has grown in recent weeks. A majority of the Michigan GOP’s district chairs have demanded Karamo’s resignatio­n. Even Karamo’s running mate and cochair has called for her removal.

“We see our opportunit­y to win Michigan for Republican­s slipping through our fingers,” wrote party leaders in an open letter to Karamo, signed by eight of the Michigan Republican party’s 13 district chairs. “We, the undersigne­d District Chairs, are locking arms in our request for your resignatio­n. Please put an end to the chaos in our Party,” they wrote.

It’s unclear whether Karamo’s opponents will convince enough people to show up to the Saturday meeting to achieve the quorum needed to officially oust her – and even if they do, Karamo may not accept defeat. But it could prove the culminatio­n of a year of bitter infighting.

The calls for Karamo to step down come less than a year after she was elected to lead the state party and three years after her outspoken claims of election fraud elevated her from a virtually unknown Christian podcaster and former community college teacher to a leading voice in Donald Trump’s campaign to discredit the results of the 2020 election. She parlayed that newfound prominence into winning the GOP nomination for secretary of state in 2022, but was crushed in the general election. Despite that lopsided loss, she ran against a Trump-endorsed candidate for party chairman last year – and defeated him.

Karamo’s outlandish views are not confined to election conspiracy theories. She has echoed the claim promoted by the QAnon conspiracy theory movement that a shadowy cabal of elites are harvesting children’s organs.

“There’s a ton of money involved in those freshly harvested organs,” Karamo said on a 2020 podcast hosted by RedPill78, a conspiracy theory website. She has also called Beyoncé and Jay-Z satanists, said yoga is a satanic ritual and described Cardi B as a “tool of Lucifer”.

But it’s her apparent financial mismanagem­ent of the party as much as her polarizing politics and wild views that have local GOP leaders prepared to oust her. The state party was already in poor financial shape when she took over, with donations drying up after Democrats won a trifecta in the statehouse in 2022 – but things have gotten significan­tly worse on her watch. Since

Karamo took over, the party has gone further into debt, with other party officials furious over questionab­le decisions like a loan to spend more than $100,000 to pay a speaking fee to Jim Caviezel, the actor in the 2004 biblical drama The Passion of the Christ who has emerged as a celebrity in QAnonaffil­iated circles.

Karamo initially agreed via text message to a phone interview, but subsequent attempts to reach her were unsuccessf­ul. She and her general counsel on Thursday called for a town hall on Friday evening “to discuss any concerns or answer any questions” about the party’s legal woes in an apparent last-ditch effort to salvage her job.

The Michigan GOP under Karamo’s leadership has even sued the Michigan Republican party Trust and Comerica Bank, which reportedly sent the party a notice of default, in an effort to gain control of the party’s Lansing headquarte­rs. In a motion filed on Tuesday, the trust, which is governed by former establishm­ent party leaders, asked the court to sanction the party for engaging in a “frivolous” suit.

A January email obtained by the Guardian from the state GOP treasurer, Jennifer Standerfer, called concerns about the party’s financial solvency – among them, an internal report that showed the party owed more than $600,000 – “misinforma­tion” and claimed the party “retains a net profit of approximat­ely $30,000”. Standerfer did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment and has not publicly substantia­ted the claim.

The stakes could not be higher for the state GOP. Michigan is one of a handful of states that will decide the 2024 presidenti­al election. And local candidates on the ballot are worried about their own fates as well.

“I’m coming up for re-election in 2024,” said state representa­tive Mark Tisdel, who articulate­d the fear, shared by state party activists, that the current Republican party would be unable to shore up campaign cash for state elected officials. “The anticipati­on is that with limited resources, there will be limited support.”

Even if Republican­s manage to remove Karamo from office, it is unclear who would be able to take over and unify the party – the divide within the state GOP runs deeper than their controvers­ial chair. Numerous county party chapters are at war internally, with tensions in the Hillsdale and Kalamazoo GOP chapters spilling out into public battles. At a July meeting of the party’s executive committee, tensions devolved into a physical altercatio­n when an activist tackled a local party chair, later citing a “war” between the grassroots and establishm­ent Republican­s as a cause of the dispute in an interview with the Detroit Free Press.

“I had somebody say to me, ‘Well, I’m more Maga than you,’” said Kelly Sackett, the chair of the Kalamazoo Republican party, who is facing a protracted revolt within her chapter by allies of Karamo who view her as insufficie­ntly rightwing. Sackett and her allies accused the state party of meddling in their affairs after the Michigan GOP’s general counsel called for a meeting that the Kalamazoo county leadership denounced as in violation of the party’s bylaws.

Karamo’s allies offered a curious justificat­ion.

“It was a ‘Peace Summit’ the term was selected because, in world politics, it is a meeting of warring factions to reach a peace accord,” the Michigan GOP general counsel, Daniel Hartman, replied in a September email obtained by the Guardian. “It was not called a meeting, and I am aware that the bylaws do not ‘authorize’ a meeting.”

Party activists told the Guardian the rise of a paranoid form of Christian nationalis­m within the party has also played a role in dividing Michigan Republican­s.

“One of the things that has been said is that the Kalamazoo county Republican party is godless,” said Sackett, “and we start every single meeting with an invocation.” Muslim leaders in the party have also spoken publicly about the party’s evangelica­l Christian leadership, which they viewed as exclusiona­ry and hostile to Michigan’s diverse population.

“It’s fundamenta­lism,” said Jon Smith, a former Michigan GOP district chair who supported Karamo before becoming disillusio­ned with her leadership. “What I’m seeing is, like, if you don’t believe in their [view of] salvation 100% to a tee, you’re the enemy or you’re evil.”

The anticipati­on is that with limited resources, there will be limited support

Mark Tisdel

 ?? Photograph: Emily Elconin/Reuters ?? Kristina Karamo speaks at a Trump rally in Washington Township, Michigan, on 2 April 2022.
Photograph: Emily Elconin/Reuters Kristina Karamo speaks at a Trump rally in Washington Township, Michigan, on 2 April 2022.
 ?? Photograph: Todd McInturf/AP ?? Donald Trump listens as Kristina Karamo speaks during a rally in Warren, Michigan, in 2022.
Photograph: Todd McInturf/AP Donald Trump listens as Kristina Karamo speaks during a rally in Warren, Michigan, in 2022.

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