Backers of Trump election claims lose in Colorado Republican midterm
primaries
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[June 29, 2022]
By Andy Sullivan and Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Republican candidates
who echoed former President Donald Trump's false claims of a stolen
presidency were defeated in high-profile nominating contests in Colorado
on Tuesday ahead of November's midterm elections.
The two Colorado candidates, U.S. Senate hopeful Ron Hanks and county
clerk Tina Peters, who had sought the Republican nomination to be
Colorado's top election official, are among dozens of Republicans who
support Trump's denial of his 2020 election loss, prompting concerns
that U.S. democracy could be at risk.
But Edison Research projected that Hanks would lose the Senate primary
to businessman Joe O'Dea, who has rejected Trump's election fraud
claims. Hanks took part in a march on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021,
when it was attacked by Trump supporters seeking to overturn his loss to
Democrat Joe Biden.
Likewise, Edison projected that Peters, who has been indicted for
election tampering and barred from overseeing voting in her home county
this year, would lose the Colorado secretary of state primary to Pam
Anderson, a former county clerk who has also dismissed Trump's baseless
allegations.
Those defeats came on a day when a congressional committee investigating
the Jan. 6 attack heard testimony from a former Trump White House aide
that she had been told he tried to take control of his presidential
limousine that day when his security detail declined to take him to the
Capitol where his supporters were rioting.
Trump acolytes prevailed in other elections.
In western Colorado, firebrand Republican Representative Lauren Boebert
was projected by Edison to defeat challenger Don Coram, who had argued
that she is too extreme.
In Illinois, Republican Representative Mary Miller was projected to
defeat Representative Rodney Davis in an unusual primary contest that
pit two incumbents against one another as the state lost a congressional
seat due to its shrinking population.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump holds a rally in Mendon,
Illinois, U.S. June 25, 2022. REUTERS/Kate Munsch
Miller caused controversy at a rally with Trump on
Saturday when she said that the Supreme Court's decision to revoke
the nationwide right to abortion was a "victory for white life."
Miller's aides say she meant to say "right to life," but Davis says
it is further evidence that she is unfit for office, citing previous
controversial comments.
Miller was 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.
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 the Chicago suburbs, Democratic Representative Sean Casten led
rival Marie Newman in a similar battle between incumbents for a
newly drawn seat.
Another one of Trump's picks, Illinois state senator Darren Bailey,
was projected by Edison Research to win the Republican nomination
for governor over Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin, a more moderate
Republican who was seen as a greater threat to incumbent Democratic
Governor J.B. Pritzker.
In New York, incumbent Governor Kathy Hochul was projected by Edison
Research to win the Democratic nomination over two rivals. Hochul
took the job last year when former Governor Andrew Cuomo resigned
while facing sexual harassment allegations.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Jason Lange, Editing by Ross Colvin
and Alistair Bell)
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