Archive for the ‘Republican’ Category

Opinion | These Republican Governors Are Delivering Results, and Many Voters Like Them for It – The New York Times

Republican flamethrowers and culture warriors like Donald Trump and Representatives Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene typically draw an outsize amount of media attention.

Americans may conclude from this that there is a striking, and perhaps unfortunate, relationship between extremism and political success.

But Republicans arent hoping for a red wave in the midterms only because norm-thrashing or scandal sells. The truth is much more banal, yet also important for parties to internalize and better for politics generally: In states across the country, Republican governors are delivering real results for people they are physically more proximate to than federal officials.

Now, its true that the party that controls the presidency nearly always gets whipped in midterm elections, and inflation would be a huge drag on any party in power. And its also true that among those governors are culture warriors like Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas.

But people too often overlook the idea that actual results, especially ones related to pocketbook issues, can often be as important as rhetoric. Looked at that way, lots of Republicans some with high public profiles, and some who fly below the radar are excelling.

Start with the simplest measure: popularity. Across the country, 13 of the 15 most popular governors are Republicans. That list does not just include red states. In fact, blue-state Republican governors like Phil Scott of Vermont, Charlie Baker of Massachusetts and Larry Hogan of Maryland are among the most popular.

There are many reasons that G.O.P. governors seem to be succeeding. Its true that governors cant take credit for everything. Sometimes they just get lucky. But they do make policy choices, and those made by governors since the start of Covid have made a difference in particular.

For example, take a look at the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data on unemployment. In the 10 states with the lowest rates as of June, eight were led by Republican governors. Several governors who dont make frequent appearances in national news stand out, like Pete Ricketts of Nebraska, Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, Spencer Cox of Utah and Phil Scott of Vermont. Their states have unemployment rates under 2.5 percent, and of the 20 states with the lowest unemployment rates, just four are led by Democrats.

States with Republican governors have also excelled in economic recovery since the start of the pandemic. Standouts in this measure include Mr. Abbott and Doug Ducey of Arizona.

These results reflect many things some states have grown and others have shrunk, for example but are at least in part a result of policy choices made by their elected leaders since the start of the pandemic. For example, governors like Kristi Noem in South Dakota often rejected lockdowns and economic closures.

Republican governors were also far more likely to get children back to in-person school, despite intense criticism.

Covid policy doesnt explain everything. Fiscal governance has also made a difference. The Cato Institutes Fiscal Report Card on Americas governors for 2020 (the most recent edition available), which grades them on tax and spending records, gives high marks to many Republicans. Nearly all of the top-ranked states in this report have Republican governors, like Kim Reynolds of Iowa or Mr. Ricketts. (Some Democratic governors also ranked highly, including Steve Sisolak of Nevada and Roy Cooper of North Carolina.) Some have made their mark with employer-attracting tax cuts, others with spending controls, others with a mixture.

Most states mandate a balanced budget, so taxing and spending policies are important for fiscal stability. Low taxes tend to attract and keep employers and employees. Restrained budgets help ensure that taxes can be kept low without sacrificing bond ratings, which may matter if debt-financed spending is needed in a crisis or to try to stimulate businesses to hire more.

Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas has cut taxes for individuals, reduced the number of tax brackets and cut the corporate income tax rate. Mr. Sununu has restrained spending, vetoed a payroll tax proposal and cut business taxes. Brian Kemp of Georgia, by contrast, actually paused some tax cuts that had been scheduled and focused almost exclusively on spending restraint, issuing a directive for state agencies to generate budget cuts and keeping 2020 general fund growth to a tiny 1 percent.

Even in blue Vermont, Mr. Scott despite being an odd duck among governors because he is not constrained by a balanced-budget amendment kept the increase in general fund spendingto an annual average of just 2.4 percent between 2017 and 2020, and he has also cut taxes. He signed a bill to ensure that the federal tax reform instituted under Mr. Trump and limiting state and local tax deductions wouldnt result in Vermonters getting hammered. He has also cut individual income tax rates, reduced the number of tax brackets and resisted new payroll taxes in favor of voluntary paid leave plans for private-sector employers.

Republicans who have a big impact on the day-to-day lives of many Americans unlike, say, Representative Kevin McCarthy or certainly Mr. Trump, and in terms of the quality of state economies, local job markets and education are delivering. In our federalist system, a lot of power still sits with states and not the federal government and determines much about citizens lives.

This is a big reason that Republicans are well positioned heading into the midterms. It should be a warning to Joe Biden and Democrats and to some of the culture warriors. Cable-news combat over whatever the outrage of the day is may deliver politicians the spotlight. But sound economic policy and focusing on the job, not theatrics, are delivering basic day-to-day results that Americans want, need and will reward.

Liz Mair (@LizMair), a strategist for campaigns by Scott Walker, Roy Blunt, Rand Paul, Carly Fiorina and Rick Perry, is the founder and president of Mair Strategies.

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Opinion | These Republican Governors Are Delivering Results, and Many Voters Like Them for It - The New York Times

Top Republican to ‘Seriously Consider Pulling the Plug’ on VA’s New EHR System – Nextgov

The top Republican on the House Veterans Affairs Committee on Wednesday expressed an openness to scrapping the Veterans Affairs Departments multi-billion dollar Oracle-Cerner Millennium electronic health record system, if serious deficiencies in the rollout of the new software are not addressed by the end of the year.

Rep. Mike Bost, R-Ill., ranking member of the full committee, said that Congress has to set a deadline for the EHR system rollout, and if there isnt major progress by early next year, we will have to seriously consider pulling the plug. Bost added that he "will be writing legislation to do just that."

Bosts comments came during a House Veterans Affairs subcommittee hearing examining patient safety concerns that have been raised during the initial rollouts of the new EHR system at VA medical centers across the country. Members of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee also grilled VA officials last week about delays and technical issues with the rollout of the new software.

Samantha Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for Bost, said after the hearing that the ranking member intends to introduce a bill before the end of the year.

The bill is in the drafting stage and the final product will depend on the initial progress, if any, that VA and Cerner make over the next few months addressing the serious problems at the initial rollout sites, Gonzalez told Nextgov. At this point, the Ranking Member is considering all legislative options, including reorienting or completely halting the project.

The VA signed a $10 billion contract with Cerner in 2018 to implement the new EHR system over a 10-year period, to replace its prior customized health information system, the Veterans Health Information Systems and Technology Architecture, or VistA. The new EHR software is currently in use at five VA medical sites, but software outages, logistical delays and technical issues have hampered the rollout.

Earlier this month, the VA Inspector Generals office also issued a highly critical watchdog report, which found that the software implemented at the first site of EHR system rolloutthe Mann-Grandstaff VA Medical Center in Spokane, Washingtonimproperly routed more than 11,000 clinical orders for veterans to an unknown queue without the knowledge of clinicians. That glitch, according to the OIG report, resulted in direct harm to at least 149 veterans.

In addition to concerns about patient care, cost overruns have also raised additional questions about the deployment of the Oracle-Cerner EHR system. The cost of the softwares implementation has already grown to $16 billion over the course of the 10-year contract, and a new cost estimate provided to Congress by the Institute for Defense Analyses found that the EHR softwares implementation and maintenance expenses would be $50.8 billion over 28 years.

VA announced last week that it would be postponing future rollouts of the Oracle-Cerner software at new medical sites until January 2023 as it works to address concerns about the EHR systems deployment.

Bost said the EHR system as it exists now is already a bad investment at $16 billion, noting that the Oracle-Cerner effort is already 10 times more expensive than the VAs previously abandoned effort to modernize VistA.

Rep. Matt Rosendale, R-Mont., ranking member of the House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Technology Modernization, echoed Bosts sentiment and said that the legacy VistA system still works and is much less expensive than any of the alternatives.

Im not hearing a credible argument for continuing this effort other than bureaucratic inertia and profit, Rosendale said, adding that the responsible thing to do is to stop throwing money at Oracle-Cerner and make targeted investments to shore up VistA.

Mike Sicilia, executive vice president for industries at Oracle, told the committee that addressing issues with the EHR system was the companys top priority. He said that Oracle, which acquired Cerner seven weeks ago, has set up a dedicated war room of its senior engineers to make needed improvements to the software.

After reviewing all of the engineering issues, I have concluded that there is nothing here that cant be materially improved in reasonably short order, Sicilia said.

Democratic leaders on the committee, meanwhile, seemed to agree that VAs health system is in need of modernization, but they also expressed serious concerns about the ways in which both VA and Oracle-Cerner have addressedand been transparent aboutdeficiencies within the EHR software rollout.

Committee Chairman Mark Takano, D-Calif., said that VA needs a modernized EHR system and that continuing with VistA is not sustainable in the long-term, but added that he will not sit idly by and allow this program to endanger veterans.

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Top Republican to 'Seriously Consider Pulling the Plug' on VA's New EHR System - Nextgov

Democrats blast the party for spotlighting challenger to Republican who voted to impeach Trump – ABC News

Just 10 days into his congressional career, Michigan Rep. Peter Meijer broke with his party and voted with nine other Republicans and every Democrat in the House to impeach President Donald Trump over the Capitol riot.

Now, just days before his primary, Meijer is under pressure from a major Democratic group, which is spending $500,000 to spotlight John Gibbs, his pro-Trump, election-denying opponent.

Airing in Western Michigan this week, the 30-second ad from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), House Democrats' campaign wing, describes Gibbs, who worked in the Trump administration, as "too conservative" for the region and Trump's "hand-picked" candidate.

While the DCCC's messaging is negative, the ad pulls focus from Meijer and underscores Gibbs' conservative credentials shortly before voters have their say.

At a time when Democrats are warning voters that election-denying Republicans pose an existential threat to democracy, the party's role in a messy GOP primary has left multiple Democratic lawmakers angry and frustrated.

"There's always a danger of unintended consequences, and I certainly would have taken a different approach," Colorado Rep. Jason Crow told ABC News on Wednesday. "We should play our game on our terms, and I don't think approaches like that are usually productive."

"I thought it was a strange choice, and I called [the DCCC] and let them know," Michigan Rep. Elisa Slotkin told ABC News.

Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., a retiring moderate who also voted to impeach Trump, called the Democratic strategy "outrageous" and pointed to Meijer's votes across party lines on impeachment and to protect same-sex marriage rights.

"Peter's been a strong independent voice, and he's put the country first on a number of issues," Upton told ABC News. "He's not a rubber stamp."

Rep. Peter Meijer arrives at the U.S. Capitol, Nov. 4, 2021.

CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images, FILE

New York Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, the chairman of the DCCC, defended the party's efforts on Wednesday. He argued that the ad was "telling the truth about John Gibbs being a dangerous extremist" and that Democratic candidate Hillary Scholten -- who will face either Gibbs or Meijer -- would "put people over politics" if elected to serve in the House.

In a brief interview in Washington on Wednesday, Meijer accused Democrats of putting "party interest" first.

"Everything they're saying in the Jan. 6 committee, everything about how my party is a threat to democracy -- and they are investing a half-million dollars to elevate and boost exactly the same thing that they're railing against?" he said.

It's pretty galling in the hypocrisy of it all. And just shameless given their high-minded rhetoric about how they are the party of democracy. Spare me that bull---," Meijer said.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., a retiring member of the House Jan. 6 committee, called the strategy "disgusting" in an interview with CNN, warning that it would help election deniers win.

Gibbs, who served in the Department of Housing and Urban Development under Trump, was unsuccessfully nominated to lead the Office of Personnel Management but faced criticism in the Senate over past comments and tweets, including speaking dismissively of Islam and promoting a conspiracy theory involving Democrats. (Gibbs said at the time that "I dont really see anything to apologize for. I was a commentator." At his confirmation hearing, he insisted, "In my service in the government ... Ive always treated people fairly.")

Democrats aren't just focusing on the right-wing candidate in Meijer's race. The party has tried to influence GOP primaries across the country -- where nominating more conservative options could create more favorable matchups in November and maintain their slim House and Senate majorities.

In California, an outside political group affiliated with House Democratic leaders tried spotlighting a pro-Trump Republican running against Rep. David Valadao, another one of the 10 GOP members who voted to impeach Trump. (Valadao survived his primary two weeks ago and advanced to the general election through Californias top-two system.)

In Colorado, the Democratic leadership-aligned Senate Majority PAC spent millions ahead of the primary last month to portray Joe ODea, a Republican seeking to unseat Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet, as a moderate compared to the more conservative Ron Hanks -- which was ultimately unsuccessful. O'Dea said Democrats were "propping up Ron Hanks in a desperate attempt to save" Bennet in November.

And Democrats in Pennsylvania, ahead of the states GOP primary in early June, elevated Doug Mastriano, who was linked to Trumps effort to challenge the 2020 election and the Capitol attack. (Mastriano was at the Capitol that day but insists he left because of the violence.) He will face Democratic state Attorney General Josh Shapiro in November.

Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney speaks during a news conference in the Capitol, Feb. 8, 2022, in Washington, D.C.

CQ-Roll Call via Getty Images, FILE

Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn., tweeted this week that he was disgusted that the DCCC has been using its funds -- including membership dues paid by lawmakers -- to boost Trump-endorsed candidates, particularly the far-right opponent of one of the most honorable Republicans in Congress.

Helen Kalla, a spokesperson for the DCCC, told ABC News the group was laser focused on holding the House majority, which we will accomplish by fighting for every competitive seat.

[Minority Leader] Kevin McCarthy is an anti-choice insurrectionist coddler and conspiracy enabler, and we will do what it takes to keep the speakers gavel out of his hands, Kalla said.

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Democrats blast the party for spotlighting challenger to Republican who voted to impeach Trump - ABC News

Michigan governor race 2022: Meet the Republican candidates – Detroit Free Press

Biden makes first public appearance after negative COVID-19 test

President Joe Biden made his first public appearance after testing negative for COVID-19 but is still working out of the Oval Office.

Ariana Triggs, Associated Press

LANSING The biggest statewide race in the Aug. 2 primary is the Republican contest to see who will go up against Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Nov. 8.

There are five candidates on the ballot, after five others were disqualified in May for submitting too many forged signatures, in a scandal the former candidates are blaming on unscrupulous signature gatherers and some of the companies that hired them.

One of the disqualified candidates, former Detroit Police Chief James Craig, is continuing to campaign as a write-in candidate.

On the Democratic side, Whitmer, who is seeking a second four-year term, is the only choice.

Republican challengers to Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson were endorsedat a state party convention and do not compete in a primary.

Here is a look at the Republicans on the primary ballot.

Residence: Norton Shores, Muskegon County

Age: 45

Occupation: Dixon has worked in the steel industry and in media, including a stint as a conservative commentator on cable TV's "Real America's Voice."

Issues: Dixon is highly critical of Whitmer's handling of the pandemic, saying too many businesses were closed for too long and children suffered from a lack of in-person learning. She also says nursing home residents, including her own grandmother, suffered needlessly as a result of excessive restrictions on family visits. On education, Dixon believes Michigan's per-pupil grant should follow the student, including to private schools, which would require a constitutional amendment. She is alone among the five candidates in not calling for big cuts to higher education spending. Early in the campaign, Dixon said changes in election practices in Michigan created the potential for fraud, but did not say fraud affected outcomes. Later, she said she believes former President Donald Trump was the rightful winner of the presidential election. Dixon opposes abortion rights, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

Education: Bachelor's degree in psychology, University of Kentucky.

Family: Married with four children.

Endorsements: The DeVos family, the Michigan Chamber of Commerce, Police Officers Association of Michigan,Conservative Political Action Conference, U.S. Rep. Bill Huizenga, U.S. Rep Lisa McClain, Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, former Gov. John Engler.

Website:https://www.tudordixon.com/

Free Press profile:https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/01/12/tudor-dixon-michigan-governor-republican-candidate/6002813001/

Residence: Allendale Township, Ottawa County.

Age: 41

Occupation: Real estate broker

Issues: Kelley was a leader in the fight against Whitmer's pandemic orders and also active in the "Stop the Steal" movement promoting, without evidence, claims that fraud tilted the election outcome in favor of President Joe Biden. Kelley, who faces misdemeanor charges arising from his presence at the Jan. 6, 2021 U.S. Capitol riot, says he would declare the COVID-19 pandemic over on his first day as governor, favor a reversal of the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage, and eliminate all government jobs related to "diversity, equity, and inclusion." He says he would also move the state to zero-based budgeting where each agency would have to justify its annual expenditures as if starting from scratch, sharply reduce Michigan's 6% corporate income taxand ban abortions except to save the life of the mother, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

Enter your address for information on which races and candidates will be on your ballot for the Michigan primary election on Aug. 2.

Education: Studied electronics engineering at Grand Rapids Community College, but did not graduate.

Family: Married with six children.

Endorsements: National Firearms Coalition, Michigan Coalition for Freedom, Michigan Health Choice Alliance PAC, American Patriots Forum, former state Sen. Patrick Colbeck, former state Rep. Kevin Green.

Website:https://ryandkelley.com/

Free Press profile:https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/07/19/ryan-kelley-republican-candidate-governor-michigan/7687125001/

Residence: Farmington Hills, Oakland County

Age: 64

Occupation: Retired pastor, police chaplain.

Issues: Rebandt says he wants to make the Bible the primary textbook in public schools a change that would be prohibited under the U.S. Supreme Court's current interpretation of the establishment clause of the constitution. He says he would eliminate state funding for public universities, though unspecified amounts would be allocated to students to use at the post-secondary school of their choice. He favors releasing more non-violent offenders from prison and says the state could save money by relying more on faith-based organizations to work with offenders. Rebandt says Trump was the rightful winner of the presidential election and filed a notarized statement with the Legislature alleging he witnessed illegal activity while observing the counting of absentee ballots in Detroit. Similar claims were rejected by Michigan courts.Rebandt opposes abortion rights, with no exceptions.

More: Most Michigan GOP governor candidates would have nixed $600M incentive GM received

More: GOP candidates for governor attack one another at Oakland University debate

Education: Bachelor's Degree in religious education from Pennsylvania's Summit University; master'sin religious education and master of divinity from Westminster Seminary in Philadelphia.

Family: Married with four grown children.

Endorsements: Southeastern Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police, My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell, Michigan Health Choice Alliance PAC.

Website:https://www.ralphrebandtforgovernor.com/

Free Press profile:https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/07/11/ralph-rebandt-michigan-governor-candidate-republican/7687064001/

Residence: Bloomfield Township, Oakland County.

Age: 61

Occupation: Businessman.

Issues: Rinke would eliminate the state income tax, which brings in close to $13 billion a year. He has not specified what if any programs he would eliminate, but says significant recent increases in the overall budget would make the change more manageable and economic growth resulting from the change would generate additional state revenue. Though he has pointed to voter fraud and ran a TV ad about dead Democrats voting, Rinke is alone among the five candidates in declining to say that Trump was the rightful winner of the 2020 presidential election. He's critical of Whitmer's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic for reasons similar to those voiced by the other Republican candidates. Rinke would allow tax credits for donations to private schools. On abortion, Rinke also stands alone in the GOP primary field in favoring exceptions to an abortion banin cases of rape, incest, and to save the life of the mother.

Education: Bachelor's degree, Michigan State University.

Family: Married with three grown children.

Endorsements: Former gubernatorial candidate and Michigan State Police Capt. Mike Brown, Michigan-born rocker Ted Nugent, conservative broadcaster and author Hugh Hewitt, former state Sen. Tonya Schuitmaker.

Website:https://rinkeformichigan.com/

Free Press profile:https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/04/04/kevin-rinke-michigan-republican-candidate-governor/6597335001/

Residence: Texas Township, Kalamazoo County.

Age: 44

Occupation: Chiropractor.

Issues: An early leader of groups opposing Whitmer's management of thepandemic, Soldano says he opposes vaccine mandates, even when imposed by private employers. Though he is the only GOP gubernatorial candidate who says he would have agreed to pay GM the more than $600 million in incentives the state has promised itto help attract $7 billion in investment and two new Michigan manufacturing plants, Soldano says he generally favors lower taxes and regulations over direct incentives. On education, hesays he favors parental choice and parental rights over "partisan teachers' unions," and, like the other four candidates, wouldban critical race theory. He wants to eliminate the personal income tax and further reduce corporate taxes but said any spending cuts would first be identified through "forensic accounting."Soldano believes Trump won the 2020 presidential election and opposes abortion rights, with no exceptions for rape or incest.

Education: Bachelor's degree in criminal justice, Western Michigan University.

Family: Married father of two.

Endorsements: This information has been requested from the campaign.

Website:https://garrettformichigan.com/home/

Free Press profile:https://www.freep.com/story/news/politics/elections/2022/06/29/garrett-soldano-republican-candidate-michigan-governor/7566053001/

Contact Paul Egan: 517-372-8660 or pegan@freepress.com.Follow him on Twitter @paulegan4. Read more on Michigan politics and sign up for our elections newsletter.

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Michigan governor race 2022: Meet the Republican candidates - Detroit Free Press

Will Republicans Shut Out the Press in 2024? – Vanity Fair

This past weekend, Florida governor Ron DeSantis and Sen. Marco Rubio, both of whom are up for reelection this fall, headlined the Republican Party of Floridas annual Sunshine Summit. Other high-profile Florida Republicans were also in attendance at the Hardrock Hotel & Casino event, which this year tried something new: after seven years of being open to the press, it limited which media could attend, giving inside-the-room access to right-wing outlets that give the governor positive coverage, Politico reports, adding that traditional GOP figures were largely replaced by the conservative social media influencers with massive followings who have recently moved to Florida and become some of DeSantis most vocal backers.

Many local and national mainstream outlets were unable to get press credentials, according to the Tallahassee Democrat, including the Miami Herald, Politico, Florida Politics, the New York Times, and the Washington Post. A Florida wire service, the Wall Street Journal, and Business Insider were among the few mainstream outlets allowed to cover at least some parts of the weekend:

"It has come to my attention that some liberal media activists are mad because they aren't allowed into #SunshineSummit this weekend, DeSantis spokeswoman Christina Pushaw tweeted Friday. "My message to them is to try crying about it," she continued, Then go to kickboxing and have a margarita. And write the same hit piece you were gonna write anyway." As the Tallahassee Democrat notes, Republicans continued to bash mainstream publications at the event itself, with DeSantis telling the Daily Wire that he wanted to avoid "a bunch of left-wing media asking our primary candidates a bunch of gotcha questions and his campaign spokesman, Dave Abrams, claiming the media tantrums about press credentials validates our presumption that fair coverage was never a thought for them.

Recent comments from DeSantis and others in the GOP speak to an emerging strategy, one that New Yorks David Freedlander defined Monday as actively courting the medias scorn while avoiding anything that may be viewed as consorting with the enemy. As Freedlander notes, Republicans for decades, going back to the Nixon years, have taken aim at the mainstream press, but the dynamic has ratcheted up since Donald Trumps political rise, evidenced by a lack of participation by Republicans in everything from political profiles to daily news storiesas well as comments from those advising them. I just dont even see what the point is anymore, an adviser to one likely GOP presidential aspirant told Freedlander. We know reporters always disagreed with the Republican Party, but it used to be you thought you could get a fair shake. Now every reporter, and every outlet, is just chasing resistance rage-clicks. Some, such as the Times Jeremy Peters, suggest that Republicans are dodging press scrutiny because they dont want to have to defend Donald Trump and his falsehoods about the election. Which could explain why one aide to a potential 2024 candidate told Freedlander that booking Steve Bannons podcast is more attractive than a sit-down with a mainstream outlet.

Freedlander cited Fox News host Tucker Carlsons recent remarks in Iowa as further evidence of the GOPs overarching view that approval from the mainstream press isnt just unnecessary but actually suspect. (A data-backed notion, apparently: GOP strategist Dave Carney said his teams research has found getting endorsed by a newspaper editorial board, even a local one, hurts Republicans in primaries rather than helps them, according to Freedlander.)

In a speech at the Family Leadership Summit last week, Carlsonwho, in what feels like a lifetime ago, once urged conservative media to be more like the Times when it comes to accuracyadvised Republican voters to be really wary of candidates who care about what the New York Times think and pay very close attention to how people react when things get out of control unexpectedly. Former South Carolina governor and likely 2024 presidential contender Nikki Haley tweeting that the murder of George Floyd was personal and painful for her, Carlson said, was case in point. You have no idea what you're talking about. You're trying to please the people whose opinions you actually care about at the New York Times, he said of Haley. I want a leader who can still think clearly when the other side really unleashes.

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Will Republicans Shut Out the Press in 2024? - Vanity Fair