Trump's midterm revenge campaign faces new test in South Carolina
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[June 14, 2022]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former President
Donald Trump's efforts to punish his perceived enemies will be tested in
South Carolina on Tuesday as Republican U.S. Representatives Tom Rice
and Nancy Mace try to fend off Trump-backed primary election
challengers.
In Nevada, Trump-endorsed Republican Adam Laxalt is seeking his party's
nomination for a crucial U.S. Senate race in this year's midterm
elections. Republican Jim Marchant, who falsely claims the 2020 election
was stolen from Trump, is vying for a chance to become the state's top
election official.
Voters also go to the polls in Maine and North Dakota to choose party
nominees to compete in the November general election.
With Democratic President Joe Biden slumping in the polls and soaring
inflation souring voters' moods, Republicans are expected to win control
of the House of Representatives and possibly the Senate. That would
bring Biden's legislative agenda to a halt and give Republicans the
power to launch investigations that could be politically damaging.
Rice, a five-term South Carolina incumbent who was one of 10 Republicans
to vote for Trump's impeachment after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the
U.S. Capitol, is seeking reelection against a crowded field of
contenders that includes Trump-backed challenger Russell Fry, a state
legislator.
Mace, a first-term incumbent, drew Trump's ire by refusing to back
Republican efforts to challenge the 2020 presidential election results
and then breaking party ranks to hold his former adviser, Steve Bannon,
in contempt of Congress. She is defending her seat against
Trump-endorsed Katie Arrington, a former state lawmaker.
Arrington won the same district's 2018 Republican primary only to lose
in the general election to Democrat Joe Cunningham, who in turn lost to
Mace in 2020.
Rice and Mace each need to more than 50% of Tuesday's vote to avoid a
June 28 run-off. Whoever ultimately wins the two Republican contests
will likely be elected to Congress in November.
The results will be watched as a measure of Trump's continued influence
over the Republican Party as he hints at another run for the White House
in 2024. His endorsees so far have had mixed success in battleground
states including Ohio, Pennsylvania, Georgia and North Carolina.
KEY NEVADA CONTESTS
Republicans in Nevada are looking to pick up the Senate seat held by
Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, considered one of the most vulnerable
Democrats in the 2022 midterm campaign.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during the National Rifle
Association (NRA) annual convention in Houston, Texas, U.S. May 27,
2022. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Adam Laxalt, a former state attorney general, leads a
crowded field of Republican primary contenders. He holds a 15-point
advantage over his nearest rival, political newcomer Sam Brown,
according to a May poll by the Nevada Independent.
Laxalt is the son of former New Mexico Senator Pete Domenici and the
grandson of former Nevada governor and U.S. Senator Paul Laxalt.
In Nevada's secretary of state contest, Marchant, a former state
legislator, is vying for the party nomination to oversee the 2024
presidential election against six other Republican candidates. He
has received endorsements from high-profile conservatives, including
former Trump White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and pro-Trump
businessman Mike Lindell.
Among 2020 election deniers running for election posts across the
country, Marchant has distinguished himself by claiming that
elections have been rigged for decades and by arguing that
electronic voting machines should be replaced by paper ballots. He
blamed his own 2020 U.S. House loss to Democratic Representative
Steven Horsford on election fraud.
Republicans also will select nominees to run against three
vulnerable House Democrats from Nevada - Horsford, Dina Titus and
Susie Lee.
Titus, who entered Congress in 2009, faces a challenge for her party
nomination from progressive Democrat Amy Vilela, who is endorsed by
Senator Bernie Sanders.
The Republican field in Titus' district includes former Nevada Trump
campaign aide Carolina Serrano, retired Army Colonel Mark Robertson
and pro-Israel activist David Brog. Brog is endorsed by Trump's
former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
In Maine, Paul LePage, whose turbulent eight years as the state's
governor foreshadowed Trump's rise, is running unopposed for the
Republican nomination to challenge Democratic Governor Janet Mills
in November.
LePage, who once described himself as "Donald Trump before Donald
Trump became popular," was widely criticized as governor for his
inflammatory remarks on a host of topics from immigration, the
environment and LGBTQ issues to abortion and voting rights. He left
office with an approval rating below 40%.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Alistair
Bell)
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