These Republicans are worried about insurrection 2.0


He interviews numerous Republicans who were in the White House, in Congress and out in the states, watching in frustration and horror as then-President Donald Trump tried to mount his coup.
What I found most interesting, and disturbing, were their warnings that Trump could be learning from his mistakes and setting the stage to repeat his efforts to steal the election in 2024.
“It looks to me that he has evaluated what went wrong on January 6. Why is it that he wasn’t able to steal the election — who stood in his way?” Republican Rep. Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio told Tapper.

“And he’s going methodically, state by state, at races from, you know, state Senate races all the way down to county commissioner races trying to get the people who the Republicans — the RINOs, in his words — who stopped this, who stopped him from stealing the election,” he said.

Gonzalez, whose parents fled oppression in Cuba, was among the House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump. He’s also decided to leave Congress at the end of his term.

The Republicans who supported impeachment and are not retiring all face primary challenges from pro-Trump Republicans.

Tapper asked Wyoming’s Rep. Liz Cheney if it will be worth it to lose her job over this. Cheney is one of two Republicans serving on the House committee investigating the insurrection; the other is Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, who recently announced he is not running for reelection.

“To me, there’s not even really a choice or a calculation. It’s just what is the right thing here and what has to be done,” she said. She made clear that she intends to run and win again.

Alyssa Farah is Trump’s former communications director. She watched the insurrection unfold from the White House. She told Tapper that what frightens her is the focus by Trump supporters on taking over state-level roles — the people who run elections.

“I think that there is a concerted effort to try to recruit loyalists to put into those chambers,” she said.

Specifically, Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who found the courage to refuse to “find votes” as Trump requested, faces a challenge from pro-Trump Rep. Jody Hice.

In Arizona, another pro-Trump Republican, state Rep. Mark Finchem, is seeking the secretary of state position.

“He’s already received the endorsement of Donald Trump. He has said over and over again that this was a fraudulent election. He’s called for decertification. He’s got a decent chance to win this primary,” Bill Gates, a Republican on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, told Tapper. “If we had people like that in these key positions moving forward, I think we are in danger.”

Georgia’s Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan is not seeking reelection because he doesn’t want to appease Trump.

“I don’t want to have to do and say the things I…



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