Trump's revenge campaign takes aim at key Wyoming, Alaska Republicans
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[August 16, 2022]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - Donald Trump's campaign to oust
congressional Republicans who supported his impeachment gets its last
major test of the U.S. midterm primary season on Tuesday, when Liz
Cheney and Lisa Murkowski face challengers backed by the former
president.
U.S. Representative Cheney, who has played a key role in the
congressional probe of the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by Trump
supporters, is expected to lose her Wyoming primary to Trump-backed
Harriet Hageman, according to recent polls.
The fate of U.S. Senator Murkowski of Alaska is less clear, as the
state's nonpartisan primary format allows the top four vote-getters to
advance to the Nov. 8 general election, which could bring a possible
rematch of Murkowski and Trump-backed Kelly Tshibaka.
Both states are reliably Republican, making it unlikely that either will
play a major role in deciding whether President Joe Biden's Democrats
lose their razor-thin majorities in Congress. Republicans are expected
to easily retake the House and also have a good chance of winning
control of the Senate.
A majority in either chamber of Congress would allow Republicans to
bring Biden's legislative agenda to a halt, as well as to launch
distracting or politically damaging investigations.
Alaska voters will also determine whether to pick Sarah Palin, a
Republican firebrand and former governor who Trump has endorsed for the
state's only House seat.
CHENEY'S LONG GAME
Cheney, the daughter of Republican former Vice President Dick Cheney,
has used her campaign -- and her position on the Jan. 6 committee -- to
try to keep attention on Trump's actions around the Capitol riot, and
his continued false claims about the 2020 election, to try to persuade
fellow Republicans the former president is a threat to democracy.
Terry Sullivan, a political strategist who managed Republican Senator
Marco Rubio's 2016 presidential campaign, views a Cheney loss on Tuesday
as a "foregone conclusion" but sees her efforts as part of a larger
battle for the party.
"Liz Cheney isn't fighting for re-election, she's fighting for the
direction of the Republican Party," he said, noting that some observers
have discussed whether Cheney should mount a presidential campaign in
2024. "It's more of a kind of a beginning, not an end."
Two recent polls show the uphill battle facing Cheney, whose relentless
criticism of Trump as an existential threat to democracy has turned off
many Wyoming Republicans, despite a congressional voting record that
supported Trump's agenda.
Cheney trailed Hageman 52% to 30% in a survey of likely primary voters
from July 7 to 11 published by Wyoming's Casper Star-Tribune. A more
recent University of Wyoming poll released last week put Hageman's lead
at 29 points.
Supporters of Cheney believe she still has a shot if enough Democrats
and independents cross over and vote for her, which is allowed in the
state's primary system and whose numbers may not be fully captured in
the polls.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump
dances onstage after speaking at the Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, U.S., August 6, 2022.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo
Jim King, professor of political science at the University of
Wyoming, said Cheney's opponents have painted her positions on
impeachment and the Jan. 6 committee as adverse to the interests of
Wyoming, where Trump won 70% of the vote in 2020.
"All of this plays into the same thing, that 'She hasn't represented
us,'" King said, adding that the consistent readings in recent
polling indicate Cheney will lose. "I don't see at this point there
is any reason to question those results."
CROSS-OVER VOTES
Cheney's backers have drawn some optimism from state voter data,
which shows a 11,495 increase in the number of registered
Republicans since the start of the year through Aug. 1, while
registered Democrats have fallen by about 6,000.
Their hope is that those numbers represent Democrats registering as
Republicans as a way to boost Cheney, although the Republican
increase is only about 8% of the primary turnout in 2018 -- not
enough to make up for the polling gap.
Joe McGinley, state committee member of the Natrona County
Republican Party in Wyoming and a Cheney supporter, also thinks
there are Republicans who are reluctant to publicly express their
intent to vote for Cheney but will do so on Tuesday.
"The true silent majority is still out there," he said.
Similar to Wyoming, Trump's endorsements in Republican-leaning
Alaska are unlikely to provide an opening for Democrats. But they
have elevated Tshibaka, who is trying to take Republican Murkowski's
Senate seat.
Under new laws which eliminated partisan primaries and introduced
ranked choice voting, Murkowski is expected to be among the top four
vote-getters to advance to the general election, with Tshibaka as
her most serious opponent.
Murkowski, a moderate who voted for Trump's impeachment, is seen as
the front-runner.
Alaskans will also choose a new U.S Representative on Tuesday to
complete the term of Don Young, who died in March.
The special election is a three-way contest between Palin, the 2008
Republican vice presidential nominee, fellow Republican Nick Begich
III and Democrat Mary Peltola.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Scott
Malone and Alistair Bell)
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