╌>

Republicans Re-elect Head of the R.N.C. After a Heated Challenge

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  hallux  •  last year  •  2 comments

By:    Lisa Lerer and Jonathan Weisman - NYT

Republicans Re-elect Head of the R.N.C. After a Heated Challenge
Ronna McDaniel won a fourth two-year term to lead the Republican National Committee, fending off a fierce challenge after the party’s poor midterm showing.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



DANA POINT, Calif. — Members of the Republican National Committee re-elected Ronna McDaniel on Friday to a fourth two-year term at the helm of the party, despite an angry pressure campaign from conservative activists and spirited calls from inside the committee for a leadership change after three successive elections of defeats and disappointments.

Ms. McDaniel, a Michigan G.O.P. insider chosen by then-President Donald J. Trump to lead the party in 2017, promised she would be the agent of change that Republican activists wanted. That promise and years cultivating connections with the committee’s 168 members proved unbeatable as the party gears up for what is likely to be a wide-open primary for the 2024 presidential election and possibly a close race for the White House.

“We need the continuity at this point in time,” said Mike Kuckelman, the chairman of the Kansas Republican Party. “There’s really no one challenging her that offers anything that is materially different than what she will do as our leader.”

But the campaign for R.N.C. chair, usually a low-key contest, exposed deep discontent after Republicans lost the House in 2018 and the White House and Senate in 2020, and then turned in a historically anemic performance for a party out of power in 2022.

“The grass roots, they’re the ones that knock on the doors, they work the polls, they put the time in on campaigns, and when we come up empty-handed, they’re just scratching their heads, saying, ‘What in the world?’” said Beth Campbell, a Republican committee member from Tennessee. “They all want change. They want to win, is the bottom line.”

Ms. McDaniel, 49, the granddaughter of a moderate Republican governor of Michigan, George Romney, and a niece of Senator Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah, began her campaign for re-election with a majority of the committee members committed to her. But a fierce challenge by Harmeet Dhillon, a member from California, chipped away at her support, with Ms. Dhillon posting committee members’ personal email accounts online and encouraging party activists to weigh in.

The vote is private, with each committee member called up by state, but the final tally was released: Ms. McDaniel won 111 votes, slightly more than two-thirds of the ballots that were cast, and Ms. Dhillion received 51 votes. Mike Lindell, the chief executive of MyPillow and a conspiracy-minded Trump loyalist, won four votes, and a single vote was cast for Lee Zeldin, the party’s nominee for governor of New York last year.



In speeches nominating Ms. Dhillion before the vote, supporters urged the committee members to listen to a conservative base that was noisily advocating for a leadership change.

“We have the opportunity to elect a chair of the R.N.C. that has the approval and the excitement of almost all the grass roots activists at home,” said Robin Armstrong, a member from Texas. “With this support, Harmeet will be a position to lead with strong winds behind her.”

Ms. Dhillon also persuaded state-level party organizations to get involved. She earned endorsements last weekend from state parties in Washington and Nebraska, ahead of the meeting at the luxurious seaside Waldorf Astoria resort here in Dana Point, Calif., with broadsides against Ms. McDaniel’s leadership.

Days before that, Oscar Brock, a committee member from Tennessee, made a public appeal to members, tying Ms. McDaniel to Mr. Trump and saying it was “clearly time” for the party to move on from Mr. Trump’s leadership. And early in January, the Alabama Republican Party’s steering committee announced   a vote of no confidence   in Ms. McDaniel.

In an interview, Mr. Brock said that he remained neutral in the fight for the Republican nomination for president in 2024, but that he was convinced Ms. McDaniel was beholden to the former president and his bid for another nomination.

“My loyalty is to running an independent primary, and I want a chairperson who can do that,” he said.

Shelly Gibson, a committee member from Guam, said on Monday she had received 113 emails that day about the leadership race. Others reported voice mail boxes clogged with messages, thousands of emails and even visits to their homes from activists supporting Ms. Dhillon.



For a majority of the members, that was all noise.

“Members of the committee are a tightknit group, kind of like a family,” said Cindy Costa, an R.N.C. member from South Carolina. “We don’t get into all this political stuff.”

The contest had an unexpected twist on Thursday, when Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida waded into the fray, praising Ms. Dhillon and urging “new blood” at the committee. The comments were notable, given Mr. Trump’s decision to publicly shy away from making an endorsement. While Mr. Trump has stayed silent, some of his top campaign aides were spotted circulating Thursday at the event in a luxury seaside resort. Last night, Kellyanne Conway, a long serving Trump administration aide, was the guest speaker at dinner.




But as a proxy campaign to gauge Mr. Trump’s sway over the Republican Party, the race for party leader was imperfect. Ms. Dhillon was a co-chair of the election-denying group Lawyers for Trump  in 2020 and never made Mr. Trump’s hold on the party an issue in her effort to unseat Ms. McDaniel.




It wasn’t clear how much Ms. Dhillon was willing to change direction, either. For instance, she said before the vote that she supported Ms. McDaniel’s decision last year to   demand that Republican presidential candidates sign a pledge   to not participate in any debates sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates.

“I fully support our party’s decision to part ways with the biased Presidential Debate Commission,” Ms. Dhillon said. “I would not change course on that.”

But some of the most outspoken anti-Trump members of the R.N.C. came out in support of Ms. Dhillon, reasoning that her call for change best aligned with their efforts to move the party beyond the former president.

Ultimately, they did not have the votes. Ms. McDaniel had six years to win over the loyalties of a majority of committee members. And with some, the pressure campaign orchestrated by Ms. Dhillon actually worked against her. Accusations that Ms. McDaniel had bought off individual members and the leaking of personal emails left even some friends of Ms. Dhillon’s seething about vile voice mail messages and a deluge of emails.

“I cleared out my inbox this morning, and since 9 today I’ve had another 50,” Ms. Campbell marveled in an interview at lunchtime Monday, saying she was in the passenger seat of her car combing through the latest messages.






Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
Hallux
PhD Principal
1  seeder  Hallux    last year

          "Mike Lindell, the chief executive of MyPillow and a conspiracy-minded Trump loyalist, won four votes ... "

Humorless bunch ... sheesh!

 
 
 
devangelical
Professor Principal
1.1  devangelical  replied to  Hallux @1    last year

bummer, the GOP would be a much bigger comedy with that f'n moron spewing conspiracies... oh wait...

 
 

Who is online

Just Jim NC TttH
devangelical
Sean Treacy
Thomas
Igknorantzruls
Jeremy Retired in NC
Snuffy


55 visitors