Election denier in Michigan loses bid to run 2024 vote in state
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[November 09, 2022]
By Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Voters in the key
election battleground of Michigan on Tuesday rejected a Republican
candidate vying to run the 2024 presidential election in their state who
backed former President Donald Trump's false claims that he won in 2020.
Kristina Karamo was beaten by Democratic candidate Jocelyn Benson in the
race to be Michigan's secretary of state, Edison Research projected.
Republican "election deniers" were also on the ballot for secretary of
state in Arizona and Nevada, but both races are yet to be called.
Democratic President Joe Biden narrowly won Michigan, Arizona and Nevada
in 2020 and Trump and his allies have falsely claimed that the results
were fraudulent.
Voting rights groups and constitutional scholars worry that any
secretary of state who believes the Trump fraud claims could try to
dispute or ignore the popular vote at the presidential election in 2024,
refuse to certify the result, or even claim the losing candidate
actually won their state.
Karamo soared to prominence when she claimed in 2020 that she had
witnessed fraud at Detroit's absentee counting board as a poll observer.
No evidence has ever emerged supporting those claims.
In 30 of the country's 50 states, election deniers were candidates for
at least one state position overseeing elections - governor, secretary
of state or attorney general, according to nonprofit advocacy group
States United Action.
While votes were still being counted in many races, States United Action
said that as of early Wednesday, 12 election deniers had won a statewide
role in election administration in eight states.
The group said election deniers were running for secretary of state in
13 states and that so far three had won, two had lost, while the
remaining eight races were still undecided.
The races in Michigan, Arizona and Nevada are particularly important
because they are key battleground states.
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Republican candidate for Michigan
Secretary of State Kristina Karamo campaigns in Clinton Township,
Michigan, U.S. November 4, 2022. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
UNDECIDED
Mark Finchem, the Republican candidate for secretary of state in
Arizona, said he would not have certified Biden's 2020 victory in
the state. He also supported an audit of Arizona's election results
and backed a bill that would give the state's legislature the power
to overturn election results.
The secretary of state in Nevada cannot certify results but can set
and enforce election rules. Republican candidate and former state
assemblyman Jim Marchant opposed certification of Biden's win in the
state in 2020.
Trump's false claims of fraud in 2020 were rejected by numerous
court rulings, his own Justice Department and even Republican-led
investigations at the state level.
Trump is considering launching this month a bid to win the White
House again in 2024, according to several Trump advisers.
Ahead of Tuesday's elections, Biden accused Trump of inspiring
Republican election denier candidates and warned voters: "Democracy
is on the ballot for all of us."
Richard Gowan, U.N. director at the International Crisis Group think
tank, said before Tuesday's election that if election deniers score
some big wins it would undercut Biden's key U.S. foreign policy
theme of promoting democracy.
"If U.S. democracy looks like it is back on life support, I think
you'll see even good friends of the U.S. start to edge away from
Washington on democracy issues," he said.
(Reporting by Michelle Nichols, additional reporting by Tim Reid,
editing by Ross Colvin, Chizu Nomiyama and Claudia Parsons)
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