Trump endorses challenger to Republican Cheney in Wyoming House race
Send a link to a friend
[September 10, 2021]
By Tim Ahmann and Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former President
Donald Trump endorsed Wyoming attorney Harriet Hageman's bid on Thursday
to unseat U.S. Representative Liz Cheney, who was the highest-profile
Republican to seek Trump's removal from office on a charge he incited
the U.S. Capitol riot.
Hageman was the fifth candidate Trump has backed to challenge a
Republican congressional incumbent, part of his efforts to assert
dominance over the Republican Party after losing his November
re-election bid to Democrat Joe Biden.
Trump's fire has been focused on the 10 Republicans in the U.S. House of
Representatives who voted to impeach him on a charge of inciting
insurrection in a fiery speech ahead of the deadly Jan. 6 assault on the
Capitol by his supporters. He has also endorsed a challenger to
Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski, one of seven in her party who voted
to convict Trump on the charge. He was ultimately acquitted.
Most of Trump's post-presidency endorsements have yet to face voters in
Republican nominating contests before the party seeks to win control of
Congress in November 2022 elections.
He has a mixed track record with those who have already faced voters.
Republican activist Susan Wright - who was seeking a vacant U.S. House
seat in Texas - lost a July special election to Texas state legislator
Jake Ellzey, a fellow Republican. Another Trump-backed candidate - coal
lobbyist Mike Carey - won a crowded August Republican nomination contest
for a U.S. House seat in Ohio.
But in Wyoming, which voted overwhelmingly for Trump last November,
public opinion polls suggest Cheney's vocal criticism of the former
president will hurt her chances of victory, said David Wasserman, a
political analyst at Cook Political Report.
"Trump still effectively leads the Republican Party, and there's no
better sign of that than in Wyoming," Wasserman said.
A Remington Research Group poll conducted in July, before Hageman's
entry into the race, showed Cheney with only 19% support among Wyoming
Republicans and second in a field of four candidates.
[to top of second column]
|
U.S. Representative Fred Upton (R-MI) speaks to reporters about
health care legislation after meeting with President Trump at the
White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 3, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
Wasserman said Cheney's best chance of winning would
be if the field remains large.
Cheney, whose father Dick Cheney served as U.S. vice president from
2001 to 2009 after a previous stint in the House, is a lawmaker with
impeccable conservative credentials. She is up for re-election in
November 2022 to a third two-year term as Wyoming's only House
member.
She responded defiantly to Trump's endorsement of Hageman. "Bring
it," Cheney wrote on Twitter. She also said she looked forward to an
"extended public debate" about the rule of law, and criticized Trump
again for misleading Americans over his baseless accusations that he
lost the 2020 election due to voter fraud.
Cheney has been a steady critic of Trump and earlier this month,
when she was named vice chair of the congressional select committee
investigating the Capitol riot, vowed she and other investigators
would "not be deterred by threats."
Hageman is a well-known attorney for land rights issues, an
important political issue in the U.S. West.
In a statement on the launch of her campaign, Hageman described
Cheney as a politician who "betrayed us because of her personal war
with President Trump."
Trump similarly called Cheney "disloyal" in a statement.
(Reporting by Tim Ahmann and Jason Lange; editing by Susan Heavey)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |