ELECTIONS
Republicans turn on Trump after Georgia loss
Fissures are forming as Republicans decide whether
it's useful to cling to Trump — even as he tries to subvert an election — or to
distance themselves.
By MERIDITH
MCGRAW, GABBY ORR, ANDREW DESIDERIO and JAMES ARKIN
01/06/2021
03:36 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/06/republicans-turn-on-trump-georgia-loss-455305
Democrats
have pulled off at least one Senate win in Georgia, with another likely to
follow. And Republicans are pointing a frustrated finger at Donald Trump.
With
control of the Senate at stake in the state’s two races, the president chose to
spend weeks peddling baseless claims that Georgia’s electoral system was
rigged, fueling an online movement to boycott Tuesday’s election. He demonized
the state’s Republican leaders and fractured the local GOP. He ignored calls
from his allies to rally in the state sooner. His support for Sens. Kelly
Loeffler and David Perdue mainly came in the form of the occasional tweet and
two rallies, including one on Monday. He blasted Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell for not heeding his calls for boosted stimulus checks.
So when Democrat
Raphael Warnock defeated Loeffler early on Wednesday — and with Democrat Jon
Ossoff having a good chance of toppling Perdue — Republicans were quick to
blame Trump.
“Trump is
the cause of this, lock, stock and barrel,” said one Republican strategist.
“But when you’re relying on someone to win you a Senate race that also lost
statewide eight weeks prior, you’re not in a position of strength.”
The
immediate recrimination is emblematic of the complicated GOP dynamics that have
emerged after Trump’s loss in the November election. Fissures are forming as
Republicans decide whether it's useful to cling to Trump — even as he tries to
subvert an election — or to distance themselves. And if the Georgia races are
any indication, it appears Republicans are willing to turn on Trump if he can’t
reliably turn out the vote for candidates in the months and years ahead.
When asked
why Republicans didn’t prevail on Tuesday, a senior Senate Republican aide
simply said: “Donald J. Trump.”
The
frustration stems from the days after the Nov. 3 election. While Republicans
tried to reset in Georgia and prepare for the two runoff races, the president
set off a civil war within his own party as he launched a divisive campaign to
overturn the 2020 election.
For the
next few weeks, the president’s focus remained on trying to overturn his
personal results in Georgia and other states. Just this past weekend, he
badgered Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger by phone for an hour,
imploring him to “find” enough votes to take the state away from
President-elect Joe Biden.
Even at a
Monday rally designed to drum up voting for Loeffler and Perdue, the president
obsessed over his own political grievances, swiping at lawmakers from his own
party, including Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.
The
behavior left Republicans shaking their heads Tuesday night, incensed that it
might have cost them two critical races.
They ticked
off a variety of reasons why Trump was to blame, even offering conflicting
theories. For instance, while some Republicans wished Trump had been more
involved in the races, others argued he should have actually excised himself
from the situation.
“He is the
Dems’ best base animator,” said one GOP strategist involved in the Georgia
races. “Look at how high turnout was on their side compared to historical
trends. Look at how much their candidates raised. He steps back after Election
Day and denies them that oxygen. He didn’t.”
The GOP
blame game has expanded beyond Trump to some of his party acolytes. One party
official suggested RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel — Trump’s hand-picked party leader
— should step down, only a day ahead of the Republican National Committee’s
annual Winter Meeting in Amelia Island, Fla.
“I think
the blame will be spread around, but a party chairman losing a presidential
election and losing the Senate majority should, out of honor, offer her
resignation even if the committee doesn’t accept it,” the Republican official
said.
McDaniel
spent the months leading up to the election trying to support the president’s
efforts to subvert the election, while simultaneously addressing concerns his
efforts might suppress the Republican vote in Georgia. In late November,
McDaniel pleaded with Republicans to vote in the runoff elections after people
at a campaign stop repeated Trump’s false claims and told McDaniel the election
was “already decided.”
Far-right
corners of the party only contributed to voter skepticism and confusion. At one
point, pro-Trump attorneys Lin Wood and Sidney Powell held a rally in
Alpharetta, Ga., where they encouraged voters to boycott the runoff elections
unless Raffensperger changed the state’s election process.
“Why would
you go back and vote in another rigged election?” Wood asked the cheering
crowd.
“I would
encourage all Georgians to make it known that you will not vote until your vote
is secure,” said Powell, who pushed false conspiracy theories about state
voting machines being corrupted by the dead Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez.
The
suggestion prompted the president to pick up the phone and ask Wood to “knock
it off.”
But the damage
may have already been done.
Guests
waits for election results during a runoff election night party at Grand Hyatt
Hotel in Buckhead January 5, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia.
“Turns out
if the leader of a party spends two months actively delegitimizing elections
and saying voting doesn’t matter, voters listen,” said a Republican who worked
on the runoff races. “There was one decisive factor in Georgia and anyone who
says otherwise is probably sharing substances with Lin Wood.”
Josh
Holmes, former chief of staff and campaign manager to McConnell, pointed out
how poorly Trump’s message had played in the Georgia suburbs.
“Suburbs,
my friends, the suburbs,” Holmes tweeted. “I feel like a one trick pony but
here we are again. We went from talking about jobs and the economy to QAnon
election conspiracies in 4 short years and - as it turns out- they were
listening!”
Trump’s
closest allies pointed the finger right back at McConnell, arguing his decision
to block the Trump-backed $2,000 Covid stimulus checks doomed the Georgia candidates.
Behind the
scenes, Georgia Republicans were also frustrated that Donald Trump Jr., the
president’s son and one of the GOP’s most popular surrogates, backed out of
appearances in the state on the Sunday before the election. Perdue personally
asked for Trump to reconsider, but Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) stepped in instead.
In the end,
Republicans appeared gobsmacked at the emerging results in two Senate races
that most believed favored the GOP at the outset.
“This
should not be close. This should not be a conversation for us at this point,”
said former RNC chairman Michael Steele on MSNBC. “We should be going for beers
right about now because the evening would have been over. And the reality of it
is, it's not, because of what this president has done to the Republican Party.”
Sam Stein
contributed to this report.

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