Analysis-Rejected by Wyoming Republicans, Cheney sets sights on stopping
Trump
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[August 18, 2022]
By David Morgan and James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After being soundly
rejected by Wyoming Republican voters, U.S. Representative Liz Cheney
vowed to spend the next two years trying to stop Donald Trump from
returning to the White House - possibly with her own anti-Trump
presidential bid.
Cheney moved quickly on Wednesday to convert her campaign for reelection
to the House of Representatives into a new political action committee
after losing her nominating primary and said she was considering whether
to launch a 2024 White House campaign.
Her Tuesday night defeat was a significant victory for the former
president in his campaign to oust Republicans who backed his impeachment
after a mob of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021,
in a failed attempt to overturn his election defeat.
"I will do whatever it takes to ensure Donald Trump is never again
anywhere near the Oval Office, and I mean it," Cheney said in her
concession speech after campaigning on her duty to the U.S. Constitution
and opposition to Trump's repeated falsehoods about a stolen 2020
election.
"Let us resolve that we will stand together - Republicans, Democrats and
independents - against those who would destroy our republic," said
Cheney, who serves as vice chair of the House committee on Jan. 6, a
position she used throughout her reelection campaign to highlight the
dangers to democracy that she says Trump and his supporters pose.
On Wednesday, Cheney told NBC's Today Show that she would decide "in the
coming months" whether to mount a White House run.
Trump ally Christian Ziegler, who is vice chair of the Florida
Republican Party, said Wyoming voters sent Cheney a message of
"rejection, condemnation, expulsion, retirement" and dismissed any
presidential bid by her.
"Cheney has no chance at public office going forward," he said.
Trump continues to flirt publicly with the idea of running again in 2024
but has not yet formally declared his candidacy. That has left other
Republican White House hopefuls, notably Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
and former Vice President Mike Pence, waiting to declare their next
moves.
'MEGAPHONE' MOVE?
Some Republicans said Cheney would not expect to win the party
nomination if she ran, but rather would devote her energies to keeping
Trump from victory - a role she could play even without a formal
candidacy.
"She knows she won't beat Trump in a Republican primary. But her
candidacy would give her an opportunity -- and a megaphone," said
Charlie Sykes, a former Wisconsin conservative radio talk show host and
frequent Trump critic. "She would be a constant thorn in his side."
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Vice Chair U.S. Representative Liz
Cheney (R-WY) speaks during a public hearing of the U.S. House
Select Committee to investigate the January 6 Attack on the U.S.
Capitol, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 12, 2022.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
Analysts said Cheney could find herself barred from any primary
debates, as Republican Party officials cut contact with perceived
threats to Trump. An independent run could backfire and
inadvertently help Trump by drawing independent voters and moderate
Republicans away from his Democratic rival.
Brendan Buck, a one-time aide to former House Speaker Paul Ryan,
said Cheney and her advisors would have to think long and hard about
how best to oppose Trump.
"That doesn't even necessarily mean she needs to be on the ballot,"
Buck said. "She may just be running a campaign from the outside. And
that means raising money, being a spokesperson, pulling together
different political organizations and factions."
After her defeat in Wyoming, Cheney filed documents with the Federal
Election Commission to convert her campaign into a leadership PAC
called "The Great Task," a phrase President Abraham Lincoln used in
his famed Gettysburg Address, during the nation's 19th Century Civil
War.
Cheney is expected to use the organization to educate the public
about the threat she believes Trump presents and to mobilize efforts
to oppose any presidential campaign by him.
She noted in her concession speech that Lincoln, regarded as one of
the greatest American presidents, lost -- and admitted to losing --
multiple races before winning the presidency.
Her campaign had about $7.5 million in cash on hand at the end of
July.
Cheney, who was first elected to Congress in 2016, has won national
praise from Trump critics for her prominent role on the Jan. 6
committee.
Despite her principled stand against lies and insurrection, she has
been criticized by what many Republicans, in Wyoming and elsewhere,
regard as her disloyalty to their party's charismatic leader.
"A lot of this just emphasizes the fact that so much of our politics
is no longer about policy, but about the question of Trump and where
you stand in relation to him," said Matthew Continetti, senior
fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
(Reporting by David Morgan and James Oliphant; Editing by Scott
Malone and Alistair Bell)
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