Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Ohio Republican sparks condemnation for comparing DC vaccine mandate to Nazi Germany | TheHill – The Hill

Rep. Warren DavidsonWarren Earl DavidsonTrump war with GOP seeps into midterms House Freedom Caucus elects Rep. Scott Perry as new chairman Congress needs to step up on crypto, or Biden might crush it MORE (R-Ohio)sparked criticismfor comparing Washington,D.C.'s vaccine mandate and COVID-19 requirements to Nazi Germany.

"This has been done before. #DoNotComply," Davidson tweeted along with an image of a Nazi-era identifying document that depicted a swastika.

Lets recall that the Nazis dehumanized Jewish people before segregating them, segregated them before imprisoning them, imprisoned them before enslaving them, and enslaved them before massacring them, Davidson said.

He also posted a photo of a column from the Los Angeles Times about mocking those who are anti-vaccine and said, Dehumanizing and segregation are underway and wrong.

Davidson'sposts, which were first reported by The Washington Post, were in response to another tweet from D.C. Mayor Muriel BowserMuriel BowserThe Hill's Morning Report - Biden champions filibuster reform, but doesn't have the votes Conservatives push for boycott of GOP club over DC vaccine mandate State of emergency declared in Virginia after record COVID-19 surge MORE (D) reminding residents about COVID-19 requirements including proof of vaccination for ages 12 and up, proof of vaccination and a photo ID for ages 18 and up as well as masks in order to enter certain indoor venues.

His remarkswere met with criticism from the American Jewish Committee.

"In what is becoming a disturbing trend, @WarrenDavidson is the latest elected official to exploit the Holocaust by making immoral and offensive comparisons between vaccine mandates and this dark period of history," the group said in a tweet. "Congressman, you must remove this shameful post and apologize."

The Hill has reached out to Davidson for comment.

The Ohio lawmakeris not the first member of the GOPto compare the pandemic to the genocide of millions of Jewish people during the Holocaust.

Last year, Rep. Marjorie Taylor GreeneMarjorie Taylor GreeneGOP efforts to downplay danger of Capitol riot increase The Memo: What now for anti-Trump Republicans? Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says she's meeting with Trump 'soon' in Florida MORE (R-Ga.) compared mask mandatesto the Nazi requirement that Jews to wear the Star of David.

Greene later visited the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and apologized for those comments,though she maintained her stance that mask requirements were discriminatory.

I believe that forced masks and forced vaccines or vaccine passports are types of discrimination. And I'm very much against that type of discrimination. What I would like to say is I'm removing that statement completely away from what I had said before, Greene said at the time.

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Ohio Republican sparks condemnation for comparing DC vaccine mandate to Nazi Germany | TheHill - The Hill

Georgia Republican who resisted Trump insists he stands for integrity and truth – The Guardian

The Republican who memorably resisted Donald Trumps attempt to overturn his election defeat in Georgia has said he will run for re-election on a platform of integrity and truth, against an opponent who as a churchman should know better than to advance the former presidents lies.

Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia secretary of state, became a household name after he turned down Trumps demand that he find 11,780 votes in order to overturn Joe Bidens win in the southern state. It was the first victory by a Democrat in a presidential race in Georgia since 1992.

The call is among subjects of an investigation by the district attorney of Fulton county into whether Trump and others committed crimes in their push to overturn election results in the state.

On Monday, Fani Willis told the Associated Press she expected to make a decision in the case in the first half of this year.

Were going to just get the facts, get the law, be very methodical, very patient and, in some extent, unemotional about this quest for justice, she said.

In this years elections, Raffensperger will face off against Jody Hice, a pastor, US congressman and Trump acolyte.

Congressman Hice, hes been in Congress for several years, Raffensperger said on Sunday, on CBSs Face the Nation. Hes never done a single piece of election reform legislation.

Then he certified his own race with those same machines, the same ballots [that were used for the presidential election]. And yet for President Trump, he said you couldnt trust that.

Thats a double-minded person. And as a pastor, he should know better. So, Im going to run on integrity and Im going to run on the truth. I dont know what hes going to run on.

Hice played a key role in legal and political attempts to overturn the 2020 election result.

Writing for the Guardian to mark the anniversary of the 6 January Capitol attack, in which Trump supporters failed to stop Congress certifying the election result, the former Clinton aide Sidney Blumenthal said that as the riot unfolded, Hice raced by a Democratic colleague, who told me Hice was screaming into his phone: You screwed it up, yall screwed it all up!

Hice, Blumenthal wrote, was tasked to present a challenge to Georgias electors as part of the far-rightwing Republican faction, the Freedom Caucus, directed by Congressman Jim Jordan, of Ohio, who was in constant touch that day with Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff and former Freedom Caucus member, and a watchful Trump himself.

Just as the violent insurrection launched, and paramilitary groups spearheaded medieval style hand-to-hand combat against the police and burst into the Capitol, Hice posted on Instagram a photo of himself headed into the House chamber with the caption, This is our 1776 moment.

Hice deleted that post and said he condemned the violence at the Capitol.

In an email to the Guardian, a spokeswoman for Hice said the congressman denied any phone calls on 6 January remotely similar to what Mr Blumenthal describes. The spokeswoman also said Hice was not in the Capitol when it went into lockdown.

But Hice formally objected to results in Arizona and Pennsylvania and voted against investigation of the attack. The select committee is reportedly interested in his own phone records as Hice remains a vocal proponent of the lie that Trump lost due to electoral fraud, a lie believed by clear majorities of Republicans.

Hice announced his run to be secretary of state in Georgia, last March, later gaining Trumps endorsement. Should he win, he will be in charge of state election counts.

Many outside the Republican party fear the prospect of Trump allies filling such posts in battleground states, preparatory to another attempt to overturn a presidential election.

Its certainly not by accident that were seeing individuals who dont believe in democracy aspire to be our states chief election officers, particularly in the states that were under the greatest spotlight in 2020, Jocelyn Benson, Michigan secretary of state, told the Guardian earlier this month.

Raffensperger and Governor Brian Kemp, however, have placed Georgia among Republican-run states which have implemented election laws which critics say aim to restrict Democratic turnout.

Asked about visits to Georgia this week by Biden and Vice-President Kamala Harris, to promote federal voting rights protections, Raffensperger told CBS: 6 January was terrible, but the response doesnt need to be eliminating photo ID and then having same-day registration.

If you dont have the appropriate guardrails in place, then youre not going to have voter confidence in the results.

Pressed on claims by figures including the Georgia gubernatorial candidate and voting rights campaigner Stacey Abrams that state election law is skewed against people of colour, Raffensperger heralded provisions for early voting and said: I think that we have shown that Georgia has fair and honest elections. We have record registrations. We have record turnout.

He also said he was confident Hice would not take over the elections process.

The results will be the results, Raffensperger said, and those will be the results that will be certified. You cannot overturn the will of the people and so that wont matter.

But at the end of the day, I will be re-elected, and he will not be.

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Georgia Republican who resisted Trump insists he stands for integrity and truth - The Guardian

Republican-flavored congressional redistricting plan passes PA House, but theres still a long way to go – WSKG.org

HARRISBURG, PA (WSKG) A proposal to redraw Congressional boundaries in Pennsylvania is one step closer to going to Gov. Tom Wolfs desk. The House approved the boundary lines almost along party lines Wednesday.

But the finish line still appears a long way off: Wolf is not happy with the proposed map and state courts are poised to intervene in the process.

Analysis shows the way the 17 districts were drawn may structurally favors Republicans. Wolf cited that in a letter to House GOP leadership outlining his opposition last month, in which he called the process that produced the map disgraceful.

Wolf has not changed his mind since then, even though Republicans have tried in vain to get him to talk about it. That signals he may veto the proposal if it reaches his desk.

The state Supreme Court has also left the door open for the courts to approve a map but only if Wolf actually vetoes it. If that panel doesnt weigh in, Commonwealth Court judges have said theyd pick a map if state lawmakers cant come to an agreement by months end.

David Thornburgh, a redistricting advocate and Senior Advisor to the Committee of Seventy, said it would be a shame to go that route.

I think people would have more confidence in a process where the legislature did its job and the governor did his job, Thornburgh said. I think were better off for all concerned if we can get this done[and] if the governor can sign a bill that shows evidence of bipartisan cooperation.

Sen. Dave Argall (R-Berks) chairs a committee that will weigh in on the Congressional map and said he is working with and Sen. Sharif Street (D-Philadelphia) on changes that could get Wolfs signature.

Its not a pro-Republican map, Argall said. Its not a pro-Democratic map. Its a bipartisan compromise that respects as many local government and county municipal boundary lines as is humanly possible.

One version leaked to the public last month creates a GOP-leaning district around Pittsburgh while eliminating Philadelphia Congressman Brendan Boyles (D, PA-2) district.

Argall said the changes arent quite completed and could be publicly discussed as early as Friday. Any plan would also have to gain Senate approval.

Were not quite there yet, but I hope to be there soon, Argall added.

The biggest factor in all of this is time.

If a final map isnt produced soon, the primary election date set for May may have to be pushed back. Beyond that, state Supreme Court Justice David Wecht alluded to the possibility that voters would have to elect members of Congress to at-large districts if mapmaking ends up deadlocked.

Federal law spells that out as a last-resort option for states that cant agree on a map but have to change the number of districts they host. Pennsylvania is losing one Congressional district because the states population didnt grow fast enough in the last decade.

The courts and the Department of State have said theyd like a final map in place by next month so candidates can begin filing nomination petitions.

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Republican-flavored congressional redistricting plan passes PA House, but theres still a long way to go - WSKG.org

Trump lost these states. Republican candidates for governor are emulating him anyway. – POLITICO

National politics seeped into governors races years before Trump came onto the political scene and gubernatorial campaigns still have maintained a degree of unique detachment. But Trumps influence over the GOP has rapidly pushed his signature policies and rhetoric into 2022 governors races especially his false, conspiratorial claims that election integrity is under threat or even that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Republican candidates are parroting those claims while running for offices that will have significant influence over election procedures in their states, potentially including certification of future elections.

I tell [Trump], the only way we can guarantee that, in 2024, we have a Republican president, is we need a leader here in the state of Nevada that understands our election laws and [is] willing to change them, Dean Heller, a former Republican senator now running for Nevada governor, said during the recent debate. He called the states current laws corrupt and said that he will make the state elections fair.

Republicans win when the process is fair, said Heller, who occasionally clashed with Trump during the presidents first year but later pulled Trump close during his losing 2018 campaign. I want a Republican president in 2024. It is going to take a Republican governor to make the necessary changes in order to make that happen.

In Pennsylvania, state Sen. Doug Mastriano who rose to prominence by parroting Trumps lies about the election and pushing for an election audit in his home state trotted out two Trump associates during his campaign launch last weekend: former national security adviser Michael Flynn and former campaign lawyer Jenna Ellis. Both have been among the most vocal proponents of conspiracies about the 2020 election.

Pennsylvania state Sen. Doug Mastriano speaks to supporters of President Donald Trump as they demonstrate outside the Pennsylvania State Capitol. | Julio Cortez/AP Photo

A slate of operatives with connections to Trump are finding work in the state. State Senate President Jake Corman announced that his team included Kellyanne Conway, Trumps final 2016 campaign manager, while former Rep. Lou Barletta hired the firm of Bill Stepien and Justin Clark, who led Trumps campaign into Election Day 2020. Bill McSwain, who was a U.S. attorney during the Trump administration, hired former Trump campaign aide James Fitzpatrick to run his campaign.

Pennsylvania where the primary field is so large that forum organizers had to cram two parallel rows of lecterns onstage at an event last week typifies the expansive roster of Republican gubernatorial hopefuls running in swing states including Arizona, Michigan, Minnesota and Nevada. Democrats control the governors mansion in all those states except for Arizona.

The exception to the crowded-primary rule has been Wisconsin, where former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch is the only credible GOP challenger to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers so far. But even there, Trump tried to draft former Rep. Sean Duffy before he passed on a campaign last week, and former Senate candidate Kevin Nicholson is actively considering jumping into the race.

Candidates across the map are vying for Trumps endorsement. So far, Trump has largely sat out open GOP gubernatorial primaries in the most competitive 2022 states only weighing in in Arizona to back former TV anchor Kari Lake.

He is, however, giving Lake some early political muscle. Trumps political committee announced on Tuesday that Lake would join the former president on stage at his rally in the state on Saturday alongside prominent election conspiracy theorists Mike Lindell and state Rep. Mark Finchem, who Trump has backed for state secretary of state. It is Trumps first rally of 2022.

But even for candidates who dont score Trumps endorsement, winning over the former presidents supporters will still be key in a Republican primary.

Not only do you not run away from that, you embrace that without hesitance, said Arizona-based Republican operative Barrett Marson, who is working for an outside organization supporting former Rep. Matt Salmons gubernatorial bid in the state.

Former Rep. Ryan Costello (R-Pa.), who has been critical of Trump since leaving office three years ago, said there will be a concerted attempt by some candidates to consolidate Trump-first supporters, so in that regard there's a Trump lane. But Costello warned that that many candidates vying for the same group of voters could fracture the vote in a primary, and that the field is unsettled in his state.

Its important to note not all Trump-first voters are reliable off-year primary voters, he added.

It's unclear whether Trump will endorse in Pennsylvania's gubernatorial primary. He previously backed Army veteran Sean Parnell in the state's open Senate race, only to see Parnell suspend his campaign after he lost custody of his children following his ex-wifes allegations of abuse. He is now staying out of that race for the time being, though that could change.

But Pennsylvania Republicans expect a Trump endorsement, if it comes, to play a big role in deciding the primary for governor, said former Trump administration official Mick McKeown, a Pennsylvania native.

"He's still the biggest name in politics, whatever you think about him. And for Republican primary voters, I think he can still resonate with a significant portion of the base," he said. "In a crowded primary like this, an endorsement from President Trump, while weighty, would carry even more weight."

Democrats, meanwhile, have cleared a path to replace the term-limited Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, with state Attorney General Josh Shapiro being functionally unopposed for the nomination.

Democrats across the battleground states have sought to further highlight the candidates ties to Trump. The Pennsylvania Democratic Party routinely refers to the GOP contest as the super MAGA primary. And Nevada Democrats warned on the anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol that the Republican field continues to embrace those dangerous lies and instill doubt about the integrity of Nevadas elections.

Republicans also warn that battleground candidates will need to do more than link themselves to Trump if they want to win in November.

Bill McCoshen, a well-connected Republican lobbyist in Wisconsin who briefly considered his own gubernatorial run, highlighted Glenn Youngkin, the Republican governor-elect in Virginia who upset former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe late last year to flip the state, as having the perfect template for how to run in the general election in a battleground state.

Take his endorsement, keep him at bay unless you absolutely have to have him for a rally, and run your own race, McCoshen said.

And national Republicans argue that candidates tying themselves to Trump wont come back to hurt them in what is shaping up to be a strong Republican year.

The thing to keep in mind is right now the messaging and the issues that matter to voters are still on our side, said Joanna Rodriguez, a spokesperson for the Republican Governors Association. At the end of the day, we still think that regardless of who comes out of some of the most competitive races, were still going to have an effective message for them to carry into the general, especially when youre looking at the states with incumbent Democratic governors.

Trumps influence isnt just confined to open gubernatorial primaries in swing states. He has also increasingly sought to bring incumbent Republican governors to heel. Most consequentially, he endorsed against Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, backing former Sen. David Perdues primary challenge.

Trump has been at war with Kemp, an otherwise down-the-line conservative politician, for not supporting his efforts to overturn Trump's loss in the state. Even before endorsing Perdue, Georgia was expected to be one of the most expensive gubernatorial races this year, with Democrats rallying behind Stacey Abrams. But the endorsement there rips open still-healing wounds among the party in the state and could drain the bank account of whomever is ultimately the nominee.

But even with Trump playing an increasingly prominent role in gubernatorial races, some Republican strategists believe that it wont last through the general election in November. There is still some delineation between the almost uniformly nationalized congressional races and gubernatorial contests, they say.

"In most cases, governor's races are less Washington, D.C.-focused and thus less about the candidates' Trump orientation," said Christopher Nicholas, a longtime Pennsylvania-based GOP consultant advising gubernatorial candidate Charlie Gerow in Pennsylvania. "Because governors have to, as the old saying goes, make the trains run on time.

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Trump lost these states. Republican candidates for governor are emulating him anyway. - POLITICO

The Coming Coup: How Republicans Are Laying the Groundwork to Steal Future Elections Mother Jones – Mother Jones

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A week before the ninth anniversary of her sons murder, Rep. Lucy McBath (D-Ga.) discovered that Republicans had radically redrawn her district to oust her from Congress.

A political novice, McBath had became a leading gun control advocate after her 17-year-old son, Jordan Davis, was shot by a white man in 2012 in an altercation over the volume of rap music he was playing. She went on to stage one of the biggest electoral upsets in Georgias recent history when, in 2018, she became the first Black person to represent the states 6th District, Newt Gingrichs home turf for 20 years. Her victory exemplified Democraticinroads in formerly red states like Georgia and the new powerbeing exercised by communities of color in the rapidly diversifying South. But those gains are quickly being erased by the GOP through a toxic combination of gerrymandering, voter suppression, and election subversion that together pose a mortal threat to free and fair elections.

Georgia is a microcosm of the extreme tactics Republicans are using across the country to entrench power in advance of the midterms. What can appear as a series of seemingly disconnected state-level skirmishes is in fact part of an insidious national strategy that goes far beyond previous efforts to suppress and undermine Democratic influence. Fueled by the Big Lie, this effort picks up where last years insurrection left off by putting in place the pieces to steal future elections by systematically taking over every aspect of the voting process.

Over the course of 2021, 19 states passed 34 laws making it harder to votethe greatest rollback of voting access since the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Those changes include more than a dozen GOP-controlled states passing new provisions to interfere with impartial election administration, while Trump and his allies aggressively recruit Stop the Stealinspired candidates to take over key election positions like secretary of state offices and local election boards in major battleground states.

What were seeing is a multifaceted, multilevel attack on American democracy, says Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, chair of the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State.

McBaths district is a striking case in point: Under a new redistricting map crafted by Georgia Republicans, her diverse suburban Atlanta seatwhere moderate white voters joined an influx of Black, Latino, and Asian American residents to elect herwould now stretch all the way to the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, with Republicans adding three deeply red and predominantly white countiesForsyth, Dawson, and Cherokeewhere Donald Trump won 70 percent of the vote. (Forsyth is infamous for forcing its more than 1,000 Black residents toleave after a Black man was lynched in 1912.) Her district would go from one that favored Biden by 11 points to one that Trump would have won by 15, one of the most drastic transformations of any district in the country.

After the map passed the legislature on November 22, McBath decided to run in a neighboring district, held by Democratic Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, that absorbed some of the most Democratic parts of McBaths old district. I refuse to let [Georgia Gov.] Brian Kemp, the NRA, and the Republican Party keep me from fighting, McBath told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in announcing her candidacy. But even if she wins a messy primary against Bourdeaux, Democrats will have lost a House seat in 2022 in a state that is trending blue, and communities of color will have less political representationeven though they account for all of the states population growth over the past decade. Moreover, because of the new redistricting maps, Republicans are set to control nine of 14 congressional districts in a state where Democrats won the presidency and two Senate seats in 2020.

A similar outcome is being replicated in other key battlegrounds, like Ohio, North Carolina, and Texas, where Republican legislatures passed redistricting maps that will hand their party between 65 and 80 percent of US House seats in states where Biden narrowed the GOPs 2016 advantage. Though Democrats are faring slightly better in the redistricting process overall compared with the last decade, these extreme maps in GOP-controlled swing states, combined with Bidens sagging approval ratings, will likely help Republicans pick up enough seats to retake the US Housein 2022 and lock indominance of state legislaturesfor the next 10 years.

And make no mistake, if Republicans prevail in rigging the 2022 election, theyll be even more emboldened in 2024, especially if Trump is on the ballot. The lies of a stolen election propagated by Trumpand exploited by Republican lawmakers who know betterare now being used to lay the groundwork to sabotage elections for real. Their endgame? President Joe Biden asked rhetorically during a major speech in Atlanta on January 11. To turn the will of the voters into a mere suggestionsomething states can respect or ignore. This isnt just about the normal ebb and flow of partisan politics; its a test of whether a party that is deadly serious about ending American democracy as we know it will regain control of ostensibly democratic institutions.

The insurrection, the gerrymandering, the voter suppression, the attacks on professional election officialsall of this puts our democracy at risk to a degree we have not seen since the Civil War, former Obama administration Attorney General Eric Holder told me recently. Thats how serious this is.

The targeting of McBath is not an isolated incident. Its a stark illustration of the GOPs nationwide playbook for undermining voting rights, with Georgia at ground zero of this battle. Georgia was an epicenter of the Trump campaigns efforts to overturn the 2020 election, with the defeated president famously telling Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to find 11,780 votes to nullify Bidens victory. Raffensperger refused, despite threats against him and his family, but Trumps Big Lie persuaded Georgia Republicans to pass a sweeping voter-suppression law last March that set the bar for restrictive voting legislation that proliferated across GOP-controlled states.

At the heart of Trumpism is the fear of a majority-minority future where white power no longer dominates. So its no coincidence that this battle is being fought hardest in the state where Black voters who vote overwhelmingly Democratic have the most to gain or lose. Along with McBath, Sen. Raphael Warnock is running for reelection in 2022 and Stacey Abrams is mounting a second bid for governor. But the voters supporting them first need to overcome more than a dozen provisions designed to reduce their access to the ballot, including a reduction in the number of drop boxes in metro Atlanta from 97 to 23, new voter-ID requirements for mail-in ballots, a far lower bar for rejecting ballots cast in the wrong precinct, less time to request and return mail ballots, a prohibition on election officials sending out mail-in ballot applications to all voters, and even a ban on giving voters food or water while theyre waiting in line.

These policies are already having an impactduring local elections in November, the number of rejected absentee-ballot applications rose from less than 1 percent in 2020 to 4 percent, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,a troubling indicator of how easy it would be to tilt the outcome in a state decided by just over 11,000 votes in 2020.

LaTosha Brown, co-founder of the Atlanta-based voting rights group Black Voters Matter Fund, calls the Georgia law a death by a thousand cuts that has the potential to change the results of the election. But the scariest part of the process, she says, is what theyre doing with the election boards.

Thats right: The newestand potentially most dangerousanti-democratic threat are new laws designed to give Trump-backed election deniers unprecedented control over how elections are run and how votes are counted.

After Raffensperger defended the integrity of the 2020 election, Republicans removed himand all his successorsas chair and voting member of the state election board, which oversees voting rules and election certification, and gave the GOP-controlled legislature the power to appoint the boards chair, allowing them to control a majority of the members.

The reconstituted state board, in turn, has extraordinary power to take over up to four county election boards that it views as underperforming or where local officials (read: fellow Republicans) have lodged complaints. In other words, partisan election officials appointed by and beholden to the heavily gerrymandered Republican legislature could control election operations in Democratic strongholds like Atlantas Fulton County, where the Trump campaign spread lies about suitcases of ballots being counted on election night after GOP poll monitors left. The state board has already appointed a panel, led by Republicans, which immediately began a performance review of Fulton County requested by Republicans in the legislaturethe first step toward a possible takeover.

Meanwhile, in at least eight Georgia counties, Republicans have already changed the composition of local election boardswhich not only certify elections but determine things like the number of polling places and ballot drop boxes, as well as voting hoursby ousting Democratic members and replacing them with Republicans. Not just any Republicans, of course, but those who claim the election was stolen. (In Lincoln County, the recently reconfigured election board recently proposed closing six of the countys seven polling sites.)

This radicalization of previously evenhanded bodies will affect not just who oversees elections, but whose votes are counted. During the January 2021 Senate runoffs, the right-wing group True the Votechallenged the eligibilityof hundreds of thousands of voters who it claimed had moved. Only a few dozen votes were ultimately thrown out, but now Georgias new law explicitly allows an unlimited number of voters to be challenged and requires local election boards to hear these challenges within 10 days or face sanctions from the state election board. Based on these challenges, local boards could then decline to certify election results or disqualify enough voters to swing a close electionexactly the gambit Trump tried to pull off in 2020.

More than just reducing turnout, theyre stacking the deck to actually manipulate the results, Brown says. Thats very scary to me.

Thats not all. Precisely because they certified the 2020 election results, Raffensperger and Gov. Kemp are now facing Trump-endorsed primary challengers, raising the prospect that Georgias top executive and top election official heading into 2024 could be Big Lie champions predisposed to helping steal a future election for Trump or another Republican candidate.

Former GOP Sen. David Perdue (who lost a January 2021 runoff election to Democrat Jon Ossoff) announced in December hed challenge Kemp. Perdue has insisted he would not have certified the 2020 election; instead, he would have called a special session of the legislature to enable Republicans to appoint pro-Trump presidential electors to nullify the will of Georgia voters. Just days after announcing his candidacy, Perdue filed a Trump-like lawsuit falsely claiming that thousands of unlawfully marked absentee ballots were counted in Fulton County in November 2020.

Raffensperger, meanwhile, is being challenged by GOP Rep. Jody Hice, who voted to reject presidential electors from Pennsylvania and Arizona after the insurrection, signed on to a lawsuit by the state of Texas asking the Supreme Court to throw out election results in Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, and has said he was not convinced at all, not for one second, that Joe Biden won the state of Georgia.

Hice is not an outlier. More than 160 Republican candidates whove amplified the Big Lie are running for statewide positions with authority over how elections are run. Thats akin to giving a robber a key to the bank, says Colorados Griswold. Many more election deniers are running for local positions like poll worker and election judge. And Republicans are not coy about their intentions. We are going to take over the election apparatus, former Trump chief strategist Steve Bannon, an architect of this strategy, said on his podcast in late December, calling for the overthrow of county election clerks.

If hijacking election administration fails, extreme gerrymandering makes it more likely that Republican legislators in increasingly safe districts, insulated from public accountability, will decide to overturn the will of their states voters in presidential contests.

After new redistricting maps were passed in states like Georgia and Texas last year, the number of competitive congressional and state legislative seats plunged. In Texas, the number of safe GOP House districts will increase from 17 to 23, according to the Cook Political Report, while the number of competitive districts will fall from 12 to just one. Despite being one of the most competitive states in 2020, Georgia will have almost no swing districts in the state legislature and no competitive congressional districtsthe closest GOP-held House seat has an 8-point Republican advantage. (Democrats and voting rights groups have filed suit against these maps.)

That means that GOP legislators not only can ignore the views of a majority of voters, but in deep-red districts theyll be chiefly concerned with primary challenges, accelerating the partys radicalization against democracy. Theyre going to have more Marjorie Taylor Greenes in their caucus, says Michael Li, an expert on redistricting at the Brennan Center for Justice.

This is how Trumps end goal for January 6 becomes far more likely in 2024: If Republicans take back the House through aggressive gerrymandering, theyll not only derail Bidens agenda, but theyll be much more inclined to reject the results of a contested presidential election if a Democrat wins. Sixty-five percent of House Republicans refused to certify the election results in 2020 just hours after the insurrection, and that caucus will become even more radical after 2022.

The people who dont want to certify free and fair elections, predicts Rep. Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.), will regain control of the federal government. They will make it harder for representative government to ever exist moving forward.

While Republicans have been hellbent on subverting American democracy, Democrats have been slow to properly defend it.

Biden didnt give a major speech about voting rights until July in Philadelphia. By then, 18 states had already passed laws making it harder to vote and Texas Democrats had fled to DC in a Hail Mary effort to block a sweeping voter-suppression law. Though Biden deemed the assault on free and fair elections to be the most significant test of our democracy since the Civil War, for the better part of a year his administration did not treat this threat to democracy as an existential emergency. Biden called passage of voting rights legislation a national imperative, but never mentioned the filibuster that was blocking such legislation or laid out a plan to overcome it.

Indeed, a remarkable asymmetry in tactics has defined this fight. While Republicans have made the hostile takeover of the countrys election system their central organizing principle, the Biden administration prioritized economic legislation over voting rights, going so far as to list the passage of the infrastructure bill as the first item in a fact sheet touting the steps it had taken to restore and strengthen American democracy ahead of a global democracy summit in December. Biden believed that passing popular pieces of legislation would prove democracy works and restore the publics faith in the democratic process, but the administrations focus on economic policyand its pursuit of bipartisanshipfailed to blunt the growing radicalization of the GOP.

GOP-controlled states have passed new voter-suppression laws, gerrymandered maps, and election-subversion bills through simple majority, party-line votes. Yet recalcitrant centrist Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin (W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.) have insisted that any federal legislation stopping such measures requires a bipartisan supermajority, portraying the filibuster not as an impediment to protecting democracy, but as integral to its functioning.

Its a situation that evokes theend of Reconstruction. Back then, insurrectionist Democrats (then the party of white supremacy) used every means necessaryincluding violence and vote-riggingto retake control of the state and federal governments, while accommodationist Republicans (then the party of civil rights) appealed to bipartisan unity, touted economic legislation, and supported the filibuster to block voting rights legislation, leading to nearly a century of Jim Crow.

Finally, in the past couple of weeks, Democrats have made a last-ditch push to protect voting rights, with Biden saying he supports exempting voting rights bills from the filibuster, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) pressing hard to change the Senate rules to overcome GOP obstruction, setting up a showdown on the filibuster by Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Today Im making it clear: to protect our democracy, I support changing the Senate rules, whichever way they need to be changed, to prevent a minority of senators from blocking action on voting rights, Biden said during his speech in Atlanta this week. When it comes to protecting majority rule in America, the majority should rule in the United States Senate. If Democrats do manage to persuade Manchin and Sinemapretty unlikelyto quickly approve approve new bills banning partisan gerrymandering and expanding voting access, such as the Freedom to Vote Act and John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, it will go a long way toward stopping GOP efforts to undermine democracy. But time is running out for it to have much impact on the midterms.

Most key battleground states have already passed new redistricting maps that courts could be reluctant to alter in the thick of an election yearand, though many states quickly expanded voting options during the pandemic in 2020, it takes time to properly implement pro-voter policies like online and automatic registration. As Li notes, Congress is in danger of losing the 2022 election cycle to anti-democratic forces.

Republicans who falsely maintain that the election was stolen say they are extremely motivated to vote in 2022, with the Big Lie functioning as a new Lost Cause movement, similar to how embittered Southerners used the death of the Confederacy as a rallying cry to fuel the backlash to Reconstruction. At the same time, the blockage of voting rights legislation is demoralizing the Democratic basewhich views democracy protection as a pressing priorityand threatening to depress turnout, making it easier for Republicans to prevail in the midterms and advance their assault on democracy.

For months, voting rights advocates and scholars of democracy have issued hair-on-fire warnings about the danger that the GOPs death-by-a-thousand-cuts strategy poses to the very foundation of representative democracy. The American experiment is at risk, Holder says. This is not hyperbole. And by 2024 the damage may have already been done. The members of Congress, governors, secretaries of state, attorneys general, state legislators, and local officials elected this November will determine to a large extent whether there will be fair elections for years to come.

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The Coming Coup: How Republicans Are Laying the Groundwork to Steal Future Elections Mother Jones - Mother Jones