Election Deniers Have Taken Over The RNC After A Trump Shake-Up
The new team of Trump loyalists in charge of the Republican Party have spent years promoting the former president’s lies about the 2020 election. With the 2024 election around the corner, they’re set to pursue an agenda built on false claims of election fraud.
As dozens of Republican Party staffers have been
purged in recent days and an incoming team takes power, much of the media attention has focused on new party co-chair Lara Trump ― who
has said of Joe Biden’s presidency, “I don’t think he won it fair” ― and
Christina Bobb, the far-right news anchor with a history of rejecting the 2020 election results, and who is now the party’s senior counsel for election integrity.
But the culture of election denialism starts at the top. Michael Whatley, the new Trump-endorsed chair of the party, is the former GOP general counsel and chair of the North Carolina GOP. He falsely claimed immediately after the 2020 election that there had been “massive fraud” nationwide.
“We do know that there was massive fraud that took place,” he said during a late-November radio interview,
CNNand
CBS News reported last month. “We know that it took place in places like Milwaukee and Detroit and Philadelphia.”
When reporters asked why he kept alleging that election fraud had occurred, Whatley claimed that “all you have to do is look at the stories that we’re seeing out of Philadelphia, the Detroit area, we’re seeing out of Milwaukee, egregious violations of election law. And there’s no question why it puts these elections at risk.”
When accepting the job of party chair, Whatley bragged of working with then-chair Ronna McDaniel to build the party’s election integrity program “from scratch” as general counsel,
and said the Republican National Committee would be “focused like a laser on getting out the vote and protecting the ballot.” He added: “If our voters don’t have confidence that our elections are safe and secure, nothing else matters.”
Whatley has also flirted with conspiracy theories about the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack,
as CNN notes. A month after the attack, he falsely claimed that “most of the people that have been arrested were not necessarily Republican voters.” Just days ago, the Raleigh News & Observer also
reported that Whatley had failed to denounce a particular Republican candidate for state House even though the candidate had ties to neo-Nazis.
Whatley has since
acknowledged Biden’s election ― meeting an extremely low bar. And when asked by CNN about his past comments, he appeared to dramatically walk back his remarks, saying that changes to voting by mail in 2020 “weakened safeguards” and “led to distrust by many.” Nonetheless,
multiplereports have indicated that Trump favored Whatley for the top job because of his focus on supposed election fraud and how Republicans will prevent it.
Specifically, Whatley won Trump’s favor by describing the North Carolina GOP’s 2020 poll watcher program. Trump has said that Whatley will stop Democrats from “cheating,”
The New York Times reported, citing unnamed sources. (Whatley’s pitch was made easier, no doubt, because Trump won North Carolina in both 2016 and 2020.)
Ironically, Whatley’s
own election as chair of the North Carolina Republican Party used electronic voting machines, and it
led to claims of wrongdoing. Even assuming that election was legitimate, the GOP’s new chair has a decadeslong history with sharp-elbowed election fights: One of his first jobs in politics was in Broward County, Florida, as part of a team of lawyers fighting for George W. Bush in the contested 2000 presidential election against Democratic nominee Al Gore. After the Supreme Court intervened and Bush won the White House, Whatley got a job in Bush’s Department of Energy.
“It was really the first time that Republicans got down into the trenches and fought,” Whatley said in 2021,
per The Associated Press. “We knew if we were not there, they were going to steal it.” He later became a lobbyist for energy companies and Lockheed Martin, and then an early Trump supporter,
The Washington Post reported.
Key to Whatley’s goal of building out the RNC “election integrity” units will be the new top bureaucrats at the party: Chris LaCivita, Trump campaign
co-manager and now reportedly RNC
chief operating officer, and Sean Cairncross, former RNC COO and now reportedly
LaCivita’s deputy.