Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Day 787 of GOP election denier hysteria (Trump Big Lie Clown Show Circus (Utah edition)

 
Meet the stars of the
ATTACK Of the Clown Show zombies
 

Burgess Owens (R-Utah)
U.S. House of Representatives
Headline:  Governing, 12/27/2022
In the months leading up to last month’s midterm elections, the company gave more than $608,900 to dozens of the objectors, documents show. That includes Representatives Burgess Owens of Utah, who said he has “no doubt” that Trump won; New York’s Nicole Malliotakis, who claimed the election was rife with “irregularities and alleged fraud”; and Florida’s Greg Steube, who called the election results “sketchy.” 
AT&T declined to comment on its giving.

Kim Crockett
Minnesota GOP Candidate for
Secretary of STate
HeadlineMinnesota Reformer, 12/26/2022
Republican Secretary of State candidate Kim Crockett led a push to get “eyes on every ballot” by recruiting more election judges — which are essentially poll workers nominated by political parties. Motivated in part by the false impression that the 2020 election was stolen, they figured an army of GOP eyes would ensure victory. 
As the campaign wore on, it became clear how connected Crockett was to a national right-wing network led by Cleta Mitchell, the Republican lawyer who tried to help former President Donald Trump flip the Georgia election results. 
Crockett, who had some problems with facts, was a key driver of activists that pushed county officials to stop using absentee ballot drop boxes and allow more partisan poll workers to staff elections.

Trump sycophant and VP wannabe
Kari Lake
Headline:  KSBW, 12/25/2022
In a tweet after the ruling, Lake, who sat in the courtroom during the trial but did not testify, said she would appeal the decision "for the sake of restoring faith and honesty in our elections."

Wisconsin election denier Harry Wait
Headline:  Washington Post, 12/22/2022
Emboldened by former president Donald Trump’s false election claims, Wait in July had ordered absentee ballots in the names of others for the purpose, he said, of exposing what he considers flaws in Wisconsin’s voting systems. Now, on a warm September afternoon, he was using the resulting voter-fraud charges against him — which could land him in prison for up to 13 years — to amplify his argument that absentee balloting should be severely restricted. 
“I’d do it again in a heartbeat because to save the republic, soldiers have to draw blood and blood be drawn,” Wait said as he sat on the courthouse bench.

Disgraced academic David Clements
 
Headline:  Reuters, 12/21/2022
Clements is a star in the world of election denial. Drawing on his credentials as a former prosecutor and professor, he lends a veneer of intellectual gravitas to bogus voter-fraud claims that have been overwhelmingly rejected by election officials and the courts. 
And yet he’s also fought bitter public battles with fellow election deniers on the political right, revealing rifts that could undermine the movement. “You are going to be shocked at the number of so-called patriots that are agents of hell,” Clements wrote on Telegram in March 2021. 
Clements declined to comment for this story unless he could publish a recording of any interview with Reuters, a condition the news organization refused. “You are nothing but a brood of vipers,” he said in an email.


Trump-endorsed Chuck Gray
Wyoming Secretary of State

In Wyoming, if you win the GOP primary, you are a shoo-in to win the general election.

HeadlineNPR, 9/8/2022
Wyoming's likely next secretary of state, a Trump-endorsed Republican who has falsely called the 2020 election fraudulent, is drawing concerns from many of his fellow GOP lawmakers. Now those legislators are aiming to draft a bill to remove the secretary of state's ability to oversee elections.
More recently...

Cowboy State Daily, 12/21/2022
He has some big holes to fill, as four of five members of the Secretary of State’s office executive team are leaving, representing 119 years of combined experience in the office between them.

According to Merriam-Webster, the first known use of 'shoo-in', as in one that is a certain and easy winner, occurred in 1937.

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