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Liz Cheney goes down with all guns blazing at Donald Trump

The Republican loses her seat to an election conspiracy theorist, but vowed to fight on and do ‘whatever it takes’.

‘No house seat is worth more than the principles we swore to protect’: Liz Cheney concedes to Harriet Hageman on Tuesday. Picture: AFP
‘No house seat is worth more than the principles we swore to protect’: Liz Cheney concedes to Harriet Hageman on Tuesday. Picture: AFP

Republican rebel Liz Cheney has lost her seat in congress to an election conspiracy theorist, but vowed to fight on and do “whatever it takes” to ensure that former president Donald Trump is never returned to power.

Once considered Republican royalty, the representative from Wyoming has become a pariah in the party over her membership on the congressional panel investi­gating the January 6 assault on the US Capitol – and Mr Trump’s role in fanning the flames.

“I have said since January 6 that I will do whatever it takes to ensure Donald Trump is never again anywhere near the Oval Office, and I mean it,” the Wyoming congresswoman said in a concession speech on Tuesday after losing her bid at re-election.

Defeat for the 56-year-old daughter of former vice-president Dick Cheney in the Wyoming ­Republican primary marks the end of the family’s four-decade political association with one of America’s most conservative states.

The former deputy house whip was defeated 66 to 29 per cent by 59-year-old lawyer Harriet Hageman for the Republican nomination for Wyoming’s only House of Representatives seat to contest November’s mid-term elections. Ms Hageman — Mr Trump’s hand-picked candidate who has amplified his false claims of a rigged 2020 election.

In her victory speech, Ms Hageman, who is expected to win the house seat in the November election, said: “We can dislodge ­entrenched politicians who believe they’ve risen above the ­people they’re supposed to represent and serve.”

In her speech on Tuesday, Ms Cheney delivered a stark warning about the danger of Mr Trump’s election fraud conspiracy theories, urging politicians on both sides of the aisle to join her fight to protect US democracy.

Speaking at a ranch near Jackson, Ms Cheney sought to move quickly beyond her defeat, setting out what she said was “real work” of her effort to ensure Mr Trump never regains the White House.

“No house seat, no office in this land, is more important than the principles we swore to protect,” she said. She blamed the former president, who is embroiled in criminal and civil investigations over alleged misconduct in office, for sending the deeply divided US towards “crisis, lawlessness and violence” with his inflammatory rhetoric. “No American should support election-deniers for any position of genuine responsibility, (because) their refusal to follow the rule of law will corrupt our ­future,” she warned.

There is already speculation that Ms Cheney may challenge Mr Trump for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024 – or even run as an independent – and supporters were hoping her concession speech would double as a blueprint for her political ­future. She pointedly avoided ­addressing the issue, but had earlier told CBS that the primary – ­regardless of the result – would be “the beginning of a battle that is going to continue”. “We are facing a moment where our democracy really is under attack and under threat,” she said.

Ms Cheney had framed her campaign as a battle for the soul of a party she is trying to save from the anti-constitutional forces of Trumpism. She was the last of 10 Republicans in the House of Representatives who backed Mr Trump’s second impeachment to face primary voters.

Harriet Hageman celebrates victory in Cheyenne on Tuesday. Picture: AFP
Harriet Hageman celebrates victory in Cheyenne on Tuesday. Picture: AFP

Four retired rather than seek re-election, three lost to Trump-backed opponents, and only two have made it through to November’s mid-term elections.

Ms Cheney voted in line with Mr Trump’s positions 93 per cent of the time when he was president but he didn’t pull his punches as he sought vengeance for her role in the house committee probe.

Mr Trump made Ms Cheney his bete noire, calling her “disloyal” and a “warmonger”, prompting death threats that have forced her to travel with a police escort. He called her defeat on Tuesday night “a wonderful result for America”. “Now she can finally disappear into the depths of political oblivion where, I am sure, she will be much happier than she is right now,” he posted on his Truth Social platform.

During the lead-up to Tuesday’s vote in Wyoming – the first US state to grant women the right to vote, in 1869 – the congresswoman was forced to run a kind of shadow campaign, with no rallies or public events. She even avoided the traditional election day photo op Tuesday, eschewing media at her local polling station to instead cast her ballot in nearby Jackson.

“Liz is representing the constituents that are in her mind, and they aren’t the constituents of Wyoming,” said Mary Martin, chairwoman of the Republican Party in Teton County – Ms Cheney’s Wyoming base.

There were also elections on Tuesday in Alaska, where 2008 Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s comeback battle – to complete the term of a congressman who died in office – divided locals.

Fourteen years after being on the losing presidential ticket headed by John McCain, Ms Palin, 58, remains popular among women as the “soccer mom” who pioneered the conservative Tea Party movement that paved the way for Trumpism. Many voters blame her for abandoning her single term as governor halfway through, amid ethics complaints, and a recent poll showed her to be viewed unfavourably by 60 per cent of Alaskans. The results in Ms Palin’s race are not expected for several days.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/liz-cheney-goes-down-with-all-guns-blazing-at-donald-trump/news-story/7e55ca09abadb6e9ee530d3f4c9255a0