USA TODAY International Edition

Cheney defeat shows it’s ‘ Trump’s party’

Ouster signals GOP campaigns will carry on false fraud claims

- David Jackson

WASHINGTON – By choosing to oust Rep. Liz Cheney from House GOP leadership, Republican­s showed Wednesday they will move forward as Donald Trump’s party, experts said, and Trump’s myth of the “stolen election” of 2020 might as well be a plank in the campaign platform.

Cheney, R- Wyo., lost her position as the third- ranking House Republican after she argued the party should move past Trump and stop echoing his claim that a “fraudulent” election cost him the presidency.

The decision to remove Cheney as House Republican Conference chair – little more than three months after Republican­s voted to keep her in the job – sets up a future in which GOP candidates will campaign as Trump acolytes and carry on his protests over his loss to President Joe Biden.

“There is no Republican Party – there’s really just the Trump party,” said political scientist Samuel Popkin, author of “Crackup: The Republican Implosion and the Future of Presidenti­al Politics.”

Cheney’s banishment suggests Republican­s who speak out against Trump’s claims about the election will be punished, despite concerns that those evidence- free accusation­s helped trigger the attack Jan. 6 on the U. S. Capitol, analysts said. As the party looks to reclaim control of Congress in 2022, the question remains: Can Republican­s win with a message built around Trump?

“If you cross him, what you’re really doing is activating the base to come after you,” said Thomas Patterson, author of a book called “Is The Republican Party Destroying Itself?”

Trump and his allies certainly aren’t finished with Cheney – and she has made clear she isn’t finished with

them.

The former president targeted Cheney and the nine other House Republican­s who voted to impeach him over the insurrecti­on Jan. 6. Trump’s allies plan to unseat Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R- Alaska, one of the seven Senate Republican­s who voted to convict Trump of inciting the riot, though the full Senate acquitted him.

In a statement heralding the vote against Cheney, Trump said, “Almost everyone in the Republican Party, including 90% of Wyoming, looks forward to her ouster – and that includes me!”

In a floor speech Tuesday night, Cheney described Trump as “a threat America has never seen before.”

“A former president, who provoked a violent attack on this Capitol in an effort to steal the election, has resumed his aggressive effort to convince Americans that the election was stolen from him,” Cheney said.

“He risks inciting further violence,” she said.

After the House vote to remove her, Cheney said, “The party is in a place that we’ve got to bring it back from.” She addressed the prospect of another Trump presidenti­al bid in 2024: “I will do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the Oval Office.”

Trump’s potential run for president in 2024 threatens to turn off suburban voters, a bloc decisive in Biden’s victory, said GOP members who back Cheney.

Some Republican­s said Trump’s 2020 election challenges reduced voter turnout in January in Georgia, where the GOP lost two crucial runoffs, handing control of the Senate to Democrats.

Liz Mair, a Republican strategist, said candidates may blur their message against Biden in the midterms “if they’re still doing the whole ‘ No, Trump really won’ shtick” regarding 2020.

“My secondary concern is that it’s hard to ask voters to turn out and vote for you if they think the election is going to be stolen,” she said, citing “what happened in Georgia.”

Sarah Longwell, executive director of the Republican Accountabi­lity Project, said deposing Cheney means the GOP won’t use its political opportunit­ies “to reform or move on” from Trump.

“They’re committing to lies and conspiracy theories – the same ones that motivated the deadly attack on the Capitol – as their core ideology and political strategy,” Longwell said.

In early February, House Republican­s voted overwhelmi­ngly – 145 to 61 – to keep Cheney as conference chairwoman, despite demands from Trump and his supporters to remove her. Cheney’s ouster Wednesday came via voice vote, with no recorded balloting.

“The message is: To be a member of the GOP in good standing, you must be subservien­t to Trump and willing to go along with the election fraud lie he is perpetrati­ng to protect his wounded ego,” said Tim Miller, a former Republican strategist.

Other Republican­s firmly believe Trump – and, more importantl­y, Trump voters – are essential to electoral success.

“If we are to succeed in stopping the radical Democrat agenda from destroying our country, these internal conflicts need to be resolved so as to not detract from the efforts of our collective team,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R- Calif., wrote to GOP members by way of endorsing Cheney’s removal.

Republican­s have a good chance of winning control of the House in the 2022 midterms and a decent chance of reclaiming a Senate that is divided 50- 50.

History favors Republican­s: Voters often go against the party of the president in midterm elections. And new census data means Republican- controlled legislatur­es in certain states could redraw favorable congressio­nal districts.

Democrats are enjoying the division, noting the spectacle can’t help but be a distractio­n heading into 2022 and a burden in 2024.

Republican pollster Whit Ayres said, “It gives the GOP’s critics a boatload of ammunition.”

“I will do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the Oval Office.”

Rep. Liz Cheney, R- Wyo.

In response to Cheney’s ouster, the Democratic National Committee said it planned to project a computer- generated image onto the Trump hotel in downtown Washington, designatin­g it Republican Party headquarte­rs.

“House Republican­s are making clear their only priority is to defend Trump and his Big Lie,” DNC chairman Jaime Harrison said.

As for whether Republican­s will be hurt by all this in 2022 general election races, analysts said it’s too soon to say.

A lot more is going to happen over the next 18 months.

“It all depends on how Biden is doing with the economy,” said Popkin, a political science professor at the University of California, San Diego.

Patterson, a professor of government at Harvard University, said McCarthy and other Republican­s are pursuing a “base strategy” aimed at the most conservati­ve and the most Trumpian voters – groups that are pretty much the same thing. “Almost everything they’ve done since the election,” he said, “is all about their base.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES ?? After House Republican­s voted to remove Rep. Liz Cheney as conference chair Wednesday, she vowed to “do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the Oval Office.”
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/ GETTY IMAGES After House Republican­s voted to remove Rep. Liz Cheney as conference chair Wednesday, she vowed to “do everything I can to ensure that the former president never again gets anywhere near the Oval Office.”

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