Cheney vows to oppose Republican candidates who deny Trump's election
loss
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[August 22, 2022]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Representative
Liz Cheney vowed on Sunday to oppose Republican candidates who back
former President Donald Trump's falsehoods about a stolen 2020 election
and declared Senators Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley "unfit" for office after
they voted to overturn the presidential results.
Cheney, who is Trump's leading critic and vice chair of the
congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the
U.S. Capitol by his supporters, told ABC's "This Week" that a broad
movement of election denial could undermine the U.S. constitutional
order if left unchecked.
The daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney has already said she
will spend the next two years trying to stop Trump from returning to the
White House in 2024, possibly with her own presidential bid.
She declined to tell ABC whether she would run inside or outside the
Republican Party, should she decide to make a presidential bid.
"I'm going to be very focused on working to ensure that we do everything
we can not to elect election deniers," Cheney said in an interview
recorded last week, days after she lost her Republican primary race in
Wyoming to a Trump-backed candidate.
"We've got election deniers that have been nominated for really
important positions all across the country. And I'm going to work
against those people. I'm going to work to support their opponents."
Cheney did not say which Republican candidates she would oppose but
acknowledged they would include some of her fellow Republicans in the
House of Representatives.
Republicans are favored to take control of the House but could face a
bigger challenge capturing a Senate majority in the Nov. 8 midterm
elections, which will determine the balance of power in Congress for the
next two years.
As one of two Republicans on the House Jan. 6 committee, Cheney has been
able to draw a direct connection between the deadly melee and Trump's
repeated false claims that he won the 2020 election against President
Joe Biden.
"Donald Trump is certainly the center of the threat," Cheney said. "What
he's created is a movement on some level that is post-truth."
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Republican candidate U.S. Representative
Liz Cheney looks on during her primary election night party in
Jackson, Wyoming, U.S. August 16, 2022. REUTERS/David Stubbs/File
Photo
The Jan. 6 assault forced Congress to temporarily suspend its
certification of Trump's loss to Biden, during which Hawley, Cruz
and other Republican members of Congress voted against certification
of election results.
Cheney said the actions of Hawley, Cruz and other Republican
lawmakers "fundamentally threatened the constitutional order and
structure" and concluded that "they both have made themselves unfit
for future office."
A Cruz spokesperson responded with a statement saying the senator
does not want or need Cheney's endorsement. A spokesperson for
Hawley said: "We wish her the best."
Neither Cruz nor Hawley is up for re-election in November.
Cheney also criticized Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for campaigning
on behalf of election deniers including Republican gubernatorial
candidates Kari Lake of Arizona and Doug Mastriano of Pennsylvania.
"That is something that I think people have got to have real pause
about. You know, either you fundamentally believe in and will
support our constitutional structure, or you don't," Cheney said.
Like Trump himself, DeSantis has flirted with voters about the
possibility of his own 2024 presidential run, while he seeks
re-election in Florida this year. The DeSantis campaign was not
immediately available for comment.
Cheney's re-election loss in Wyoming last week was widely seen as a
victory for Trump's revenge campaign against House Republicans who
voted to impeach him after the Jan. 6 riot.
She told ABC she heard from Biden afterwards: "We had a very good
talk, a talk about the importance of putting the country ahead of
partisanship."
(Reporting by David Morgan;Editing by Mary Milliken, Lisa Shumaker
and Lincoln Feast.)
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