Trump's false election claims cast shadow over Illinois, Colorado
contests
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[June 28, 2022]
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican voters in
Colorado and Illinois will weigh former President Donald Trump's false
claims of a stolen presidency on Tuesday as they select candidates for
the November elections that will determine control of Congress and many
state governments.
Republican candidates who support Trump's denial of his 2020 election
loss have already won several high-profile nominating contests in other
states this year, prompting concern among Democrats and independent
observers that U.S. democracy could be at risk.
Those concerns are acute in Colorado, where county clerk Tina Peters is
seeking the Republican nomination to be the state's top election
official, even though she has been indicted for election tampering and
barred from overseeing voting in her home county this year.
Peters is among dozens of Republican candidates this year who have
rejected Trump's defeat by Democrat Joe Biden and are now seeking to
oversee state elections.
Her leading Republican rival, Pam Anderson, does not support Trump's
fraud claims. Anderson is endorsed by several state Republican
officials, including past election officials.
Despite arguing that Trump's claims undermine democracy, Democrats have
interfered in some Republican contests to boost his allies, calculating
that those candidates will prove too extreme for voters in November.
In Colorado, Democratic groups have spent money in the Republican
primary for U.S. Senate to boost Ron Hanks, a state legislator who
marched in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Hanks faces
businessman Joe O'Dea, who has rejected Trump's claims. The winner of
that contest will face vulnerable Democratic Senator Michael Bennet.
In the Illinois contest for governor, Democratic groups have spent
heavily to elevate Republican state Senator Darren Bailey, who has been
endorsed by Trump, over Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, a more moderate
Republican who is seen as a greater threat to incumbent Democratic
Governor J.B. Pritzker.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump holds a rally in Mendon,
Illinois, U.S. June 25, 2022. REUTERS/Kate Munsch
With Biden's approval ratings underwater, Republicans
are favored to win control of the House of Representatives, where
they need to flip only five Democratic seats for a majority, and
could also take over the Senate.
A Republican-controlled House could stymie Biden's legislative
agenda and launch politically damaging investigations into his
administration.
In Illinois, several incumbent lawmakers face off against each
other, as the state lost a seat in Congress due to its shrinking
population.
Republican Representative Mary Miller is facing criticism after
saying at a rally with Trump on Saturday that the Supreme Court's
decision to revoke the nationwide right to abortion as a "victory
for white life."
Miller's aides say she meant to say "right to life," but rival
Representative Rodney Davis says it is further evidence that she is
unfit for office, citing previous controversial comments.
Miller has been endorsed by Trump and has backed his false claims of
a stolen election. Davis, by contrast, broke with his party last
year to back the congressional inquiry into the Jan. 6 attack.
The winner of the race is expected to win re-election in November in
a largely rural, Republican-leaning seat.
The state's population loss has also forced two incumbent House
Democrats, Sean Casten and Marie Newman, to face off for a suburban
Chicago seat. Casten has raised more than twice as much money as
Newman, who faces an ethics investigation for allegedly promising a
job to a political rival.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan, Editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair
Bell)
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