https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2021/may/07/liz-cheney-trump-republicans-us-politics-live
14:23
Liz Cheney’s likely removal from House Republican
leadership demonstrates the immense influence that Donald Trump still wields
over the party, even though he left office nearly four months ago.
Republican
leaders are signaling that they will embrace Trump and his policy positions
even more as the 2022 midterms draw near. Most of the Republican base remains
loyal to the former president, and the party needs those voters to turn out
next November in order to take back Congress.
And Trump
himself will soon be much more visible than he has been since leaving office.
Senior Trump aide Jason Miller told Axios that the former president will start
holding campaign rallies “as soon as late spring or early summer”.
1h ago
14:16
Republicans are using the language of “unity” to
justify ousting Liz Cheney from her role as House GOP conference chairwoman.
The AP
reports:
The House
GOP, led by Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, is moving toward stripping Rep. Liz
Cheney of her leadership post for her frequent criticism of former President
Donald Trump. The unusual step, they say, is necessary to unify a party whose
base still reveres the former president four months after he incited a deadly
riot at the U.S. Capitol. ...
With
Republicans close to reclaiming control of the House next year, the treatment
of Cheney suggests GOP leaders will do almost anything to rally the party’s
base, even if that means sweeping the events of Jan. 6 under the rug and
embracing — or refusing to confront — Trump’s ongoing lie that he won the 2020
election, a campaign that he actually lost by a wide margin.
Those
backing Cheney’s ouster argue she has become a distraction by continuing to
criticize Trump, who remains the dominating force in the party. They want to move
forward, they say, and focus on policy ideas and providing a clear contrast
with Democrats. But critics see the fight as a larger distraction. ‘My
unsolicited advice would be: Talk about the future and what you offer to
Americans,’ said Alyssa Farah, the former Trump White House communications
director. ‘I do worry that this is sort of showing that we’re going to continue
more the politics of personality as opposed to the politics of policy and
deliverables to the American public.’

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