Trump’s legacy: Republicans torn by infighting, revolts as 2024 looms
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[March 04, 2023]
By Gram Slattery, Tim Reid and Alexandra Ulmer
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - In Las Vegas, Nevada, Republican activists want to
recapture the party from a local leader who backs former President
Donald Trump’s false election fraud claims. In Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina, a battle for control of the local Republican party’s assets
has wound up in court. In North Carolina, party activists are seeking to
punish Republican Senator Thom Tillis for his support for same-sex
marriage rights.
As the 2024 presidential race kicks into gear, local Republican party
organizations in many parts of the United States are consumed by
rebellions, infighting and court battles that some officials and
strategists said could damage the party’s chances of winning back the
White House.
Reuters spoke to more than 50 operatives, activists and party officials
in competitive states Arizona, Georgia and Nevada, which Trump narrowly
lost in 2020; North Carolina, which he won; and in the key early primary
state of South Carolina. Nevada also holds an early presidential
nominating contest.
While Republican divisions in Congress have been widely covered, Reuters
looked at grassroots battles, especially in the small handful of states
that remain truly competitive, that have not been closely examined.
Some strategists and officials warned the spectacle of a party at war
with itself in electoral battlegrounds and early primary states risks
turning off voters and donors.
"The degree to which we can manage this will determine how well our
presidential candidate does," said Maurice Washington, the chair of the
Republican Party in South Carolina’s Charleston County, a regular
campaign stop for presidential candidates, and himself a target of
right-wing challengers.
“There’s always that potential of behavior patterns turning off
middle-of-the-road voters,” Washington said.
Although it is too early in the election cycle to see a direct impact of
these fights, and these feuds could subside once a presidential nominee
is chosen, Ronna McDaniel, the head of the Republican National
Committee, the party's central governing body, has called for unity.
Larry Hogan, a Trump critic who left office in January after serving two
terms as the Republican governor of Maryland, told Reuters it was
crucial for the party to move beyond the former president if it wanted
to win the 2024 elections.
Democrats outperformed expectations and avoided a Republican "red wave"
in the November 2022 midterm elections, in part because voters shunned a
slew of Trump-backed, hard-right candidates.
"Voters sent a clear message in the last three elections: they want
competence and common sense solutions, not more crazy,” Hogan said. “If
we want to start winning again, then we have to start listening."
Not everyone agrees. North Carolina State Representative Mark Brody, who
supports censuring Sen. Tillis, says it is better to address differences
directly.
“I think one of the things that we fight against is that there is a
tendency to say: Maybe we should just leave this alone. One side says:
don’t bring this up because some people might turn away," he said. "My
side is: Let’s address that, and let’s set the record straight."
IN NEVADA, A PARTY REVOLT
In Nevada's Clark County, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the
state's population, Margaret White, a former chief of staff for county
Republicans, is leading about 50 current and former party members in a
rebellion against the current county party leader Jesse Law in the swing
state.
White said that Law’s support for Trump’s false election fraud claims
and his backing for far-right candidates in last November's midterm
elections are damaging Republicans' prospects in 2024. Most state and
local candidates backed by Law lost in the midterms.
The activists filed paperwork last month to launch a non-profit
organization called "Las Vegas Voices of Reason." White and Drew Hirsty,
the county party member who made the filing, told Reuters that
formalizing the structure will allow them to raise funds among
independent voters as well as Republicans.
The group is contacting 400 Republicans, who resigned or were expelled
from the party since Law took over in 2021, asking them to register to
vote so they can remove him in the summer leadership contest, White
said.
"We want normal people in charge who can appeal to moderates,
independents and minorities, and that's not Jesse Law,” White told
Reuters.
White said the party needs to appeal to a broader set of voters;
otherwise it will keep losing elections. About half of White’s core
group of 50 are Black, Hispanic or Asian, reflecting the diverse
demographics of Nevada. Law backed several far right candidates that
lost in November's midterms.
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Merchandise with symbols of former
President Donald Trump is sold at the Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC) at Gaylord National Convention Center in National
Harbor, Maryland, U.S., March 3, 2023. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger
Law, who served as a senior member of Trump's 2016 and 2020
campaigns in Nevada, and the county party did not respond to
requests for comment.
John Bruchhagen, a Republican podcaster who says he is friends with
people in both factions, said Law has worked hard to boost voter
turnout and promote candidates but has an “impossible” job because
the local party has become so factionalized.
The fighting in Clark County escalated in January when White was
involved in a standoff with party members at the county party’s
central committee meeting in Las Vegas.
White, who quit her post last year in protest at Law’s leadership,
showed up with two bodyguards, one of whom was retired Las Vegas
Police Lieutenant Randy Sutton, who told Reuters he carried a
concealed firearm to the meeting.
White was ordered to leave by a security guard. Sutton told Reuters
he was challenged to a fight by one Republican at the meeting who
was part of a group that objected to White's presence.
Law and the county party did not respond to questions about the
standoff.
ARIZONA: A BID TO CHANGE PRIMARY RULES
In Arizona, a former conservative stronghold that is now a swing
state, a group of Republicans dismayed by hard-right candidates who
deny the 2020 election are raising money and gathering signatures to
force a referendum on an amendment to the state constitution that
would open primary elections to all voters, according to Beau Lane,
a Republican businessman who is involved in the effort.
Lane, who ran an unsuccessful campaign for Arizona Secretary of
State last year, said his Save Democracy AZ group wants more
moderate, less polarizing figures to emerge from the primary
process.
SOUTH CAROLINA: FIGHTING OVER PARTY ASSETS
In one of South Carolina's most populous counties, a breakaway
far-right faction of the party led by Roger Slagle and Chad Caton
who support the former president’s false claims of election fraud,
reject candidates they say are insufficiently conservative.
These include former two-term South Carolina governor Nikki Haley,
who announced in February she was running for president; South
Carolina Senator Tim Scott, who is widely expected to run for the
presidency as well; and the former Vice President Mike Pence.
When the party prepared to host Pence at an event – which the former
vice-president subsequently canceled – Caton criticized the effort
in a text message to Reuters as part of a “plan to push Trump out.”
Scott's office declined to comment. Ken Farnaso, a spokesperson for
Haley, did not respond to a request for comment.
HAVE REQUESTED PENCE COMMENT
The split dates back to last September when Slagle and his allies
briefly quit the party but maintained control of the county party's
website, bank account, and folding tables and chairs. A judge last
month ordered Slagle’s group to hand over the chairs.
Both sides acknowledge a legal fight over the bank account is
likely. "Is it something you want to spend party funds on? No," said
Reese Boyd III, who is the recognized party county leader. "We're
all inside the big tent, and we're shooting machine guns at one
another. It's not productive for anyone."
CENSURE FOR NORTH CAROLINA SENATOR
In North Carolina, Republican party committees in about a third of
the state's counties have voted to censure Republican Senator Tillis
for his support for same-sex marriage rights. They are now seeking a
state-wide condemnation, which would block Tillis's access to party
resources and funds in a potential Senate primary.
Although Tillis retains support among the party establishment, Jim
Womack, a county party chair, says the Senator’s critics are gaining
strength. “The North Carolina Republican party will eventually be
decentralized to the point where the grassroots will actually run
the party,” Womack said.
Tillis did not respond to requests for comment.
(Reporting by Gram Slattery in Myrtle Beach, S.C.; Tim Reid in Las
Vegas and Alexandra Ulmer in San Francisco; Additional reporting by
Nathan Layne in Hillsdale, Michigan. Editing by Ross Colvin and
Suzanne Goldenberg)
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