Republican congressman Steve King fights for political life in Iowa
primary
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[June 02, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Firebrand
U.S. congressman Steve King, who was called out by his colleagues last
year for using hateful and intolerant rhetoric, is fighting for his
political life in an Iowa primary where four Republicans are trying to
take his seat.
Voters in his district have returned King to Congress before despite his
incendiary comments, often directed against immigrants. Tuesday's vote
comes at a particularly charged moment in U.S. history as major cities
have seen widespread protests over Minneapolis police killing George
Floyd last week.
The House last year overwhelmingly voted to repudiate King's comments
questioning why "white supremacy" is offensive, with King himself
joining in that vote. The House stripped him of his committee
assignments as a result. A month later he wondered aloud whether the
human race would exist without rape and incest, prompting renewed calls
for him to step down.
King urged construction of a border wall in 2006, nearly a decade before
Trump ran for president calling for the same.
The loss of his committee posts gave a new opening to King's opponents
to question his effectiveness. King's leading rival, State Senator Randy
Feenstra, bills himself as a "pro-Trump effective conservative."
Major political players including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and
Republican consultant Karl Rove have backed Feenstra, who has raised
nearly three times King's campaign cash.
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Republican Rep. Steve King (R-IA) speaks during a town hall in
Primghar, Iowa, U.S., January 26, 2019. REUTERS/KC McGinnis/File
Photo
King calls his re-election race the "epicenter of the battle against
the swamp."
But it is the hardest re-election fight he has faced since his
election to Congress in 2002. In 2016 King was a national
co-chairman of Ted Cruz' 2016 presidential campaign, and Trump met
King in the Oval Office in 2018.
In 2018 Democrat J.D. Scholten came within 3 percentage points of
beating King. Scholten is running again, unopposed, in the
Democratic primary Tuesday.
If no one gets at least 35% in the Republican primary, the nominee
will be chosen at a district convention.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Scott Malone and Lisa
Shumaker)
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