ELECTIONS
Liz Cheney turns to Democrats to save her hide
The math doesn't lie — and neither do Cheney’s actions
on the ground in recent months.
While Rep. Liz Cheney has yet to overtly court
Democrats, her decision to investigate Donald Trump appeals to voters who
detest the former president. |
By TARA
PALMERI
03/14/2022
04:30 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/14/liz-cheney-democrats-wyoming-00016905
JACKSON,
Wyo. — In 2007, in this blue bastion of one of the reddest states in the
country, liberal activists wheeled a giant statue of Dick Cheney through town
to protest his star role in the Iraq War — before toppling it, Saddam Hussein
style, for good measure.
Fifteen
years later, his daughter Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) is turning to the same rare
species in Wyoming — Democrats — to save her House seat. And Trumpist
Republicans are doing everything in their power to thwart her.
The
turnabout for Cheney — one of the more unlikely twists in Republican politics
in recent years, in a party that’s had no shortage of them — will come into
sharp relief next week at a gathering at Jackson’s Center for the Arts. Cheney
will speak on a bipartisan panel about defending elections, addressing what
should be a welcoming audience amid her running battle with former President
Donald Trump over the Jan. 6 sacking of the Capitol.
What Cheney
doesn’t know — until now — is that a band of Trump-loving Republicans will be
on hand to greet her. They snapped up roughly a quarter of the 350 tickets, at
$10 apiece, to give the embattled congresswoman a piece of their minds.
“I was here
when the … Democrats dragged her father’s effigy down a village road behind a
truck at one of their rallies, and those are the people who are supporting her
now, that she’s embraced,” an angry Rebecca Cloetta, 66, said over breakfast at
a greasy spoon called the Virginian.
“Can you
believe it? Charging for a ticket! It’s a slap in the face,” said Rebecca
Bextel, 41, another Trump-backing Republican planning to attend the voting
event. “We have one person representing us” — Wyoming has a single House member
— “and she shows up in town and it costs $10 to see her. It’s embarrassing.
“She is
not,” Bextel vowed, “going to get reelected.”
Bextel may
well be correct. Though there’s been scant public polling of her primary
campaign against Trump-backed Harriet Hageman, it’s apparent that Republicans
in Wyoming — which voted for Trump over Joe Biden, 70 to 27 percent, in 2020 —
have turned against Cheney en masse since Jan. 6, 2021.
Just as
obvious is that Cheney needs Democrats and independents to change their party
registration and cast their vote for her in the Aug. 16 primary. Her campaign
is loath to talk strategy publicly, but the math doesn’t lie — and neither do
Cheney’s actions on the ground here in recent months.
She has
shunned town halls and other voter forums in Wyoming’s overwhelmingly red
counties in favor of controlled events. At the March 22 event, which is being
hosted by Issue One, a bipartisan organization that advocates for “sweeping
reforms to fix our broken political system,” Cheney will answer pre-selected
questions.
When Cheney
was censured by the state Republican Party in February 2021, three of the eight
votes against the move were by officials from Teton County, which encompasses
Jackson. The dissenters included Mary Martin, now the county’s GOP chair.
Since then,
however, Martin has soured on Cheney. She said the congresswoman is rarely in
the state, despite having been urged to explain why she voted to impeach Trump.
“She was
absolutely invited to come and present what her facts were, to defend why you
are doing this and instead she opted to call the Republicans radicals, which
has made people upset within the party,” Martin said from the Jackson mansion
of Nancy Donovan, a prominent Republican donor in Wyoming.
“She’s not
in the state, she has not been anywhere, maybe one or two places,” Donovan
echoed. “She doesn’t show up … she’s very entitled. Her parents have events at
their house, I’ve spent money to go to her house to fund her. … I truly will
never vote for her again.”
Martin went
further, calling Cheney’s work on the Jan. 6 committee “duplicity.”
“She’s been
MIA since Jan. 6. And what we all truly believe is that the Wyoming seat is a
stepping stone to running for president in 2024 and she needs to get Trump out
of the way. And to raise money, she’s using the anti-Trump commentary,” Martin
speculated.
An empty
chair labeled "Representative Cheney" sits in front of a meeting room
in Rawlins, Wyo., on Feb. 6, 2021. The Wyoming Republican Party central
committee voted to censure Rep. Liz Cheney for voting to impeach President
Donald Trump. Republican officials said they invited Cheney, but she didn't
attend. | Mead Gruver/AP Photo
Cheney
declined to be interviewed for this story. But she told The New York Times last
month that she will not openly court Democrats by supporting a “Democrats for
Cheney” group or encourage an existing political action committee, dubbed
“Switch for Wyoming,” that encourages Democrats to vote in Republican
primaries.
Without an
aggressive campaign strategy to win over Democrats, it might seem like a tough
sell: Cheney, after all, voted with Trump 93 percent of the time, according to
FiveThirtyEight. But some Democratic voters in Jackson are embracing her. They
appreciate Cheney’s work in Congress prosecuting Trump and they’re ready to
switch parties to vote for her.
Even if
they’re not ready to admit it publicly.
“I think
her politics are crap, but I like how much hate she gets from the people of
Wyoming,” said a 27-year-old event planner who will register as a Republican
for the first time to vote for Cheney. He asked not to be named because “it’s a
small town.”
“There are
a lot of things about her that don’t appeal to me as a gay man,” he said. “She
was not supportive of her sister until it came out in the news, and that is a
big red flag. … At the same time, it’s Wyoming, a population of 500,000. Every
vote counts.” Wyoming’s population is just under 579,000, according to U.S.
Census figures.
Pete
Jenkins, 54, a contractor who’s lived in Wyoming for three decades, said he
identifies personally as a Democrat — he did not vote for Trump in 2016 or 2020
— but is registered as a Republican just to have some influence in Wyoming politics.
He said he intends to vote for Cheney — and has heard from lots of other
Democrats planning to do the same.
“I think
it’s a fairly popular thing,” he said of the party-switchers-for-Cheney
movement.
Cheney
needs as many of them as she can get.
Wyoming
political strategists say the only path to victory for Cheney is with the help
of Democrats and independents. The state’s 2018 Republican primary for an open
governor’s seat is instructive. Mark Gordon, the GOP state treasurer at the
time, was facing stiff competition from the right. More than 10,000 voters
switched parties or registered as Republicans for the first time between the
primary and general elections.
Gordon won
the primary by 9,000 votes against candidates that included Hageman. Turnout
was 116,000 and Gordon received just shy of 39,000 votes.
While
Cheney has yet to overtly court Democrats, her decision to aggressively
investigate Trump as a leader of the select Jan. 6 House committee naturally
appeals to voters who detest the former president.
Cheney
allies are hopeful that crossover voters will bail her out this time. They are
counting on a primary with at least two pro-Trump GOP candidates that will
divide the anti-Cheney vote. With the help of even half of the 73,000 Democrats
who voted for Biden in 2020, they believe Cheney could pull it off.
That theory
isn’t lost on House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who has told members that
he’s worried that the numbers add up for Cheney and that she might be back in
Congress next session, according to a source with direct knowledge of the
discussions. McCarthy did not respond to a request for comment.
Trump, too,
is worried that Democrats will help reelect Cheney. He backed a bill in the
Wyoming legislature that would have barred voters from switching parties on the
day of a primary election in order to vote for a candidate of another party.
But that
proposal died in the Wyoming legislature last week.
At an event
in Cheyenne earlier this month where nearly 200 people in cowboy hats and boots
showed up to support Hageman, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) urged voters to call their
legislators to back the measure.
“I’ll tell
you this, there’s only one way Liz Cheney wins, and that’s if you let Democrats
vote in your primary, so you need to call your state rep and let them know,” he
said just days before the bill died.
After the
event, Hageman told reporters, “I’m fully confident I can win this race whether
the crossover bill happens or not. … It’s something that’s been an issue in our
state for many years, it’s not just 2020.”
A
progressive organizer who helped get the Democratic vote out for Gordon in 2018
crunched the numbers based on a hypothetical three-way race between Hageman,
Cheney and Republican state Sen. Anthony Bouchard. The person said Bouchard —
because he remains popular among the MAGA set even after Trump endorsed Hageman
— could play spoiler by drawing as much as 15 percent of the vote.
That could
open the door just enough for Cheney to slip through, the organizer said.
It will
depend on Cheney’s “on-the-ground voter engagement — not high-priced advertising
campaigns that will quickly saturate Wyoming’s small markets,” the person said.
“We know at least some of these voters will vote if they think their vote will
make a difference in a race that means something to them.”
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