Why Republican voters say there’s ‘no way in hell’ Trump lost
Send a link to a friend
[November 20, 2020]
By Brad Brooks, Nathan Layne and Tim Reid
SUNDOWN, Texas (Reuters) - Brett Fryar is
like many mainstream Republicans. A 50-year-old chiropractor in this
west Texas town, he owns a small business. He has two undergraduate
degrees and a master’s degree, in organic chemistry. He attends
Southcrest Baptist Church in nearby Lubbock, where he has previously
taught Sunday school and bible studies.
Fryar didn’t much like Donald Trump at first, during the U.S.
president’s 2016 campaign. He voted for Texas Senator Ted Cruz in the
Republican primaries.
Now, Fryar says he would go to war for Trump. He has joined the newly
formed South Plains Patriots, a group of a few hundred members that
includes a “reactionary” force of about three dozen - including Fryar
and his son, Caleb - who conduct firearms training.
Nothing will convince Fryar and many others here in Sundown - including
the town’s mayor, another Patriots member - that Democrat Joe Biden won
the Nov. 3 presidential election fairly. They believe Trump’s stream of
election-fraud allegations and say they’re preparing for the possibility
of a “civil war” with the American political left.
"If President Trump comes out and says: 'Guys, I have irrefutable proof
of fraud, the courts won't listen, and I'm now calling on Americans to
take up arms,' we would go," said Fryar, wearing a button-down shirt,
pressed slacks and a paisley tie during a recent interview at his
office.
The unshakable trust in Trump in this town of about 1,400 residents
reflects a national phenomenon among many Republicans, despite the
absence of evidence in a barrage of post-election lawsuits by the
president and his allies. About half of Republicans polled by Reuters/Ipsos
said Trump “rightfully won” the election but had it stolen from him in
systemic fraud favoring Biden, according to a survey conducted between
Nov. 13 and 17. Just 29% of Republicans said Biden rightfully won. Other
polls since the election have reported that an even higher proportion -
up to 80% - of Republicans trust Trump’s baseless fraud narrative.
Trump’s legal onslaught has so far flopped, with judges quickly
dismissing many cases and his lawyers dropping or withdrawing from
others. None of the cases contain allegations - much less evidence -
that are likely to invalidate enough votes to overturn the election,
election experts say.
And yet the election-theft claims are proving politically potent. All
but a handful of Republican lawmakers have backed Trump’s fraud claims
or stayed silent, effectively freezing the transition of power as the
president refuses to concede. Trump has succeeded in sowing further
public distrust in the media, which typically calls elections, and
undermined citizens’ faith in the state and local election officials who
underpin American democracy.
In Reuters interviews with 50 Trump voters, all said they believed the
election was rigged or in some way illegitimate. Of those, 20 said they
would consider accepting Biden as their president, but only in light of
proof that the election was conducted fairly. Most repeated debunked
conspiracy theories espoused by Trump, Republican officials and
conservative media claiming that millions of votes were dishonestly
switched to Biden in key states by biased poll workers and hacked voting
machines.
Many voters interviewed by Reuters said they formed their opinions by
watching emergent right-wing media outlets such as Newsmax and One
American News Network that have amplified Trump’s fraud claims. Some
have boycotted Fox News out of anger that the network called Biden the
election winner and that some of its news anchors - in contrast to its
opinion show stars - have been skeptical of Trump’s fraud allegations.
“I just sent Fox News an email,” Fryar said, telling the network:
“You’re the only news I’ve watched for the last six years, but I will
not watch you anymore.”
The widespread rejection of the election result among Republicans
reflects a new and dangerous dynamic in American politics: the
normalization of false and increasingly extreme conspiracy theories
among tens of millions of mainstream voters, according to government
scholars, analysts and some lawmakers on both sides of the political
divide. The trend has deeply troubling long-term implications for
American political and civic institutions, said Paul Light, a veteran
political scientist at New York University (NYU).
"This is dystopian," Light said. "America could fracture.”
Adam Kinzinger, a Republican member of the U.S. House of
Representatives, is among the few party members to publicly recognize
Biden’s victory. He called his Republican colleagues’ reluctance to
reject Trump’s conspiracies a failure of political courage that
threatens to undermine American democracy for years. If citizens lose
faith in election integrity, that could lead to “really bad things,”
including violence and social unrest, he said in an interview.
David Gergen - an adviser to four previous U.S. presidents, two
Democrats and two Republicans - said Trump is trying to “kneecap” the
Biden administration before it takes power, noting this is the first
time a sitting American president has tried to overthrow an election
result.
It may not be the last time. Many Republicans see attacks on election
integrity as a winning issue for future campaigns - including the next
presidential race, according to one Republican operative close to the
Trump campaign. The party, the person said, is setting up a push for
“far more stringent oversight on voting procedures in 2024,” when the
party’s nominee will likely be Trump or his anointed successor.
Other Republicans urged patience and faith in the government. Charlie
Black, a veteran Republican strategist, does not believe Republican
lawmakers will continue backing Trump’s fraud claims after Biden is
inaugurated. They will need White House cooperation on basic government
functions, such as appropriations and defense bills, he said.
"People will come to see we still have a functioning government,” Black
said, and Republicans will become “resigned to Biden, and see it’s not
the end of the world.”
The Biden campaign declined to comment for this story. Boris Epshteyn, a
strategic advisor to the Trump campaign, said: “The President and his
campaign are confident that when every legal vote is counted, and every
illegal vote is not, it will be determined that President Trump has won
re-election to a second term.”
[to top of second column]
|
Brett Fryar poses outside of his office in Sundown, Texas,
U.S., November 12, 2020. REUTERS/Brad Brooks
‘THERE’S JUST NO WAY’
Media outlets declared Biden the election winner on Nov. 7. As calls
were finalized in battleground states, Biden’s lead in the Electoral
College that decides the presidency widened to 306 to 232. (For a
graphic explaining the electoral college, see: https://tmsnrt.rs/38VTUvK
)
Many Republican voters scoff at those results, convinced Trump was
cheated. Raymond Fontaine, a hardware store owner in Oakville,
Connecticut, said Biden’s vote total - the highest of any
presidential candidate in history - makes no sense because the
78-year-old Democrat made relatively few campaign appearances and
seemed to be in mental decline.
"You are going to tell me 77 million Americans voted for him? There
is just no way," said Fontaine, 50.
The latest popular vote total for Biden has grown to about 79
million, compared to some 73 million for Trump.
Like many Trump supporters interviewed by Reuters, Fontaine was
deeply suspicious of computerized voting machines. Trump and his
allies have alleged, without producing evidence, a grand conspiracy
to manipulate votes through the software used in many battleground
states.
In Grant County, West Virginia - a mountainous region where more
than 88% of voters backed the president - trust in Trump runs deep.
Janet Hedrick, co-owner of the Smoke Hole Caverns log cabin resort
in the small town of Cabins, said she would never accept Biden as a
legitimate president.
"There's millions and millions of Trump votes that were just thrown
out,” said Hedrick, 70, a retired teacher and librarian. “That
computer was throwing them out.”
At the Sunset Restaurant in Moorefield, West Virginia - a diner
featuring omelettes, hotcakes and waitresses who remember your order
- a mention of the election sparked a spirited discussion at one
table. Gene See, a retired highway construction inspector, and Bob
Hyson, a semi-retired insurance sales manager, said Trump had been
cheated, that Biden had dementia and that Democrats planned all
along to quickly replace Biden with his more liberal running mate
for vice president, Kamala Harris.
"I think if they ever get to the bottom of it, they will find
massive fraud," said another of the diners, Larry Kessel, a
67-year-old farmer.
Kessel’s wife, Jane, patted him on the arm, trying to calm him, as
he grew agitated while railing against anti-Trump media bias.
Trump’s rage against the media has lately included rants against Fox
News. He has pushed his supporters towards more right-wing outlets
such as Newsmax and One America News Network, which have championed
the president’s fraud claims.
Rory Wells, 51, a New Jersey lawyer who attended a pro-Trump “stop
the steal” election protest in Trenton last week, said he now
watches Newsmax because Fox isn’t sufficiently conservative.
“I like that I get to hear from Rudy Giuliani and others who are not
immediately discounted as being crazy,” he said of Trump’s lead
election lawyer.
Newsmax CEO Chris Ruddy said the network’s viewership has exploded
since the election, with nearly 3 million viewers nightly via cable
television and streaming video devices.
Ruddy said Newsmax isn’t saying that Biden stole the election - but
they’re also not calling him the winner given that Trump has valid
legal claims. “The same media who said Biden would win in a
landslide now want to not have recounts,” he said in a phone
interview.
Charles Herring, president of One America News Network, said in a
statement that his network has seen three weeks of record ratings,
as “frustrated Fox News viewers” have tuned in.
‘NO WAY IN HELL’
Some Trump supporters said they would accept Biden as the winner if
that is the final, official result. Janel Henritz, 36, echoed some
others in saying that she believed the election included fraud, but
perhaps not enough to change the outcome. Henritz, who works
alongside her mother Janet Hedrick at their log cabin resort in West
Virginia, said she would accept the outcome if Biden remains the
winner after recounts and court challenges.
"Then he won fair and square," she said.
In Sundown, Texas, Mayor Jonathan Strickland said there’s "no way in
hell" Biden won fairly. The only way he’ll believe it, he said, is
if Trump himself says so.
“Trump is the only one we’ve been able to trust for the last four
years,” said Strickland, an oilfield production engineer. “As far as
the civil war goes, I don’t think it’s off the table.”
If it comes to a fight, Caleb Fryar is ready. But the 26-year-old
son of Brett Fryar, the chiropractor, said he hoped Trump’s fraud
allegations would instead spark a massive mobilization of Republican
voters in future elections.
Asked whether Trump might be duping his followers, he said it’s hard
to fathom.
“If I’m being manipulated by Trump ... then he is the greatest con
man that ever lived in America,” Caleb Fryar said. “I think he’s the
greatest patriot that ever lived.”
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Texas, Nathan Layne in West Virginia
and Tim Reid in California; editing by Brian Thevenot)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |