The Guardian (USA)

Michigan GOP chair Kristina Karamo rightly ousted, say RNC lawyers

- Alice Herman

The Republican National Committee’s top attorneys have declared they believe the Michigan Republican chair, Kristina Karamo, was legitimate­ly ousted from her position earlier this month, ending weeks of silence from the national party on a leadership crisis that has engulfed state Republican­s.

The factional split within the Michigan Republican party, over ideologica­l difference­s as well as personal ones, has sown chaos with just months to go before the 2024 presidenti­al election. In recent weeks, tensions escalated, with two feuding groups within the state party claiming to be its legitimate leaders.

RNC general counsel Michael Whatley and chief counsel Matthew Raymer wrote in a letter obtained by the Guardian that they believed that an early January vote by state party officials to remove Karamo, who made her mark peddling election conspiraci­es after the 2020 election, as their chair was indeed legitimate – in spite of Karamo’s insistence that it was not.

“Based upon its initial review, it appears to the counsel’s office that Ms Karamo was properly removed in accordance with the Michigan GOP bylaws on January 6,” they wrote in a letter to Karamo and Pete Hoekstra, who was elected to replace her by party members who engineered her ouster. They noted that the issue was not yet settled and that the RNC’s position was not final or binding.

The RNC attorneys’ opinion offers Michigan and national Republican­s guidance as they head to their winter meeting in Las Vegas at the end of the month. But it is not a definitive resolution in the factional dispute that has festered over the last year within their state party. The letter also declared that neither Karamo nor Hoekstra would be “credential­ed as Michigan GOP chair” when those meetings convene.

Until now the RNC had remained silent over the feud, especially since its current chair, Ronna McDaniel, is herself a former chair of the Michigan Republican party.

But Karamo and her allies insist that even a ruling from the RNC won’t remove them from leadership. In a 25 January email to precinct delegates, the Michigan GOP general counsel – a Karamo ally who was also removed in the 6 January vote – wrote that he acknowledg­ed the RNC letter was “authentic”, but added: “I do not care because their opinion is irrelevant to any resolution.”

When Karamo took office nearly a year ago, she inherited an organizati­on that was broke and divided – and in her year as chair, the party’s problems have worsened. Karamo, who embodies the GOP’s shift into stranger and more extreme political territory, made a name for herself as a vocal proponent of Trump’s false election claims, pushing election conspiracy theories as well as even wilder ideas (like claiming JayZ is a “satanist” and yoga is a “satanic ritual” ) during her 2022 run for secretary of state.

She was defeated in the general election but refused to concede, then beat a Trump-backed nominee for state party chair who had voiced similar campaign conspiracy theories last February after she promised to revitalize the state party’s moribund fundraisin­g operation.

But the flow of grassroots cash Karamo promised never came. Divisions deepened in county chapters

over the growth of extreme factions on the right, with physical altercatio­ns breaking out on multiple occasions. The party under her leadership got wrapped up in litigation. Even though the party was nearly broke, under Karamo’s leadership state GOP took out a loan to cover a more than $100,000 speaking fee to bring Jim Caviezel, a celebrity figure in the QAnon movement and the starring actor in The Passion of the Christ, to the Mackinac Republican Leadership Conference in September.

By the time a group of Michigan

 ?? ?? Kristina Karamo speaks in Lansing, Michigan, on 18 February 2023. Photograph: Nathan Layne/Reuters
Kristina Karamo speaks in Lansing, Michigan, on 18 February 2023. Photograph: Nathan Layne/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States