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In this edition of Americana, we sort through the results of the 2022 election and the final effort ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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December 14, 2022
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Americana

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David Weigel
David Weigel

In this edition of Americana, we sort through the results of the 2022 election and the final effort to overturn one of its most surprising results.

David Weigel

Kari Lake and ‘Stop the Steal’ make their final stand in Arizona

REUTERS/Jim Urquhart

THE NEWS

The effort to overturn Arizona’s gubernatorial election entered its final stage on Tuesday, after a judge set a late-December schedule for Kari Lake’s challenge to Democratic Gov.-elect Katie Hobbs.

Democrats have until Thursday to file a motion to dismiss Lake’s lawsuit, which blames “illegal votes,” “intentional misconduct,” and a “botched” election in Maricopa County for Hobbs’s 17,117-vote victory last month. If the motion is denied, evidentiary hearings will be held on Dec. 21 and 22 — not long after Lake addresses Turning Point USA’s “AmericaFest” in Phoenix, where two candidates to run the Republican National Committee will also speak.

“I’ve read a lot of crazy election contest lawsuits and this is one of the craziest I’ve seen,” said Marc Elias, a Democratic election attorney whose firm is representing Hobbs’s campaign. “Kari Lake’s legal team might as well have unveiled this lawsuit from the parking lot of an Arizona landscaping company.”

Christina Amestoy, a spokeswoman for the Democratic Governors Association, called the lawsuit Lake’s “final act” in a “constant ploy for attention,” and the continuation of “the assault on Arizona’s election process that began in 2020.”

Neither the Republican Governors Association nor the Republican National Committee has backed Lake’s lawsuit, though the RNC is part of attorney general nominee Abe Hamadeh’s challenge to his 509-vote loss to Democrat Kris Mayes.

The law firm of RNC chair candidate and California RNC member Harmeet Dhillon is representing Hamadeh; its filing begins by stating that the plaintiffs are not “alleging any fraud, manipulation or other intentional wrongdoing that would impugn the outcomes of the November 8, 2022, general election.”

DAVID’S VIEW

If you stopped paying attention to Kari Lake last month, you are not alone. She’s the last high-profile GOP candidate endorsed by Donald Trump this cycle who has not conceded defeat. Her presence in most media has shrunk since the election was certified for Hobbs last week. Lake filed her lawsuit on Friday; there was no mention of it on any of Fox News’s prime time shows, where candidate Lake had been a frequent guest.

In other conservative media, the Lake challenge has been covered closely, not just as a Hail Mary-chance to overturn a painful defeat but as a wedge between the party’s grassroots and its national party leadership. Lake herself has argued that RNC chair Ronna McDaniel should be replaced, joining conservative activists who believe that the national party lost winnable races by not immediately replacing the voting infrastructure — from electronic machines to skeptical county commissioners — that was in place when Joe Biden won.

“I think we probably need some new leadership,” Lake said in a Monday interview on Facebook with Kristi Leigh, who like Lake is a former TV news broadcaster who went independent after airing her grievances with mainstream media. “We’ve had some big setbacks, and I think you can’t keep rewarding failure.”

McDaniel is the heavy favorite to win a fourth term as RNC chair, even after the Texas GOP’s executive committee unanimously voted that she “must be replaced.” But some conservatives are using the contest as a proxy for a different argument — whether the party must adjust to the reality of early voting and widespread mail balloting, or whether it can transform the voting system.

Lake was supposed to do that if she won. Arizona was the wellspring of the “Stop the Steal” movement, and Turning Point USA had, and has, considerable political clout there. Arizona RNC Committeeman Tyler Bowyer has been the COO of TPUSA for five years; Jake Hoffman, a TPUSA consultant, got elected to the state legislature in 2020 and advocated that Maricopa County be split into three smaller counties, demolishing the power of GOP county supervisors who conducted and defended the 2020 election.

“The Republican Party should have had an army of lawyers here months, if not years, in advance,” Bowyer told TPUSA president Charlie Kirk last week on Kirk’s podcast. “Kari Lake is the best candidate that’s probably ever run in the state of Arizona, probably the Southwest, probably the West, probably west of the Mississippi, maybe ever — certainly in this century, for governor.”

Like Lake, her supporters in the movement insist that most Arizonans wanted her to be governor, and were undone by ballot-printing problems that affected 70 of 223 Maricopa voting centers — though those problems were fixed during the day, and occurred in both blue and red parts of the county. On Monday, a Lake ally in the state Senate even filed a lawsuit on behalf of plaintiffs in deep red Mohave County, arguing that their “voting strength” had been “diluted” by Maricopa.

If these efforts fail, two years of Stop the Steal organizing will have come to nothing. It would be a defeat for attorneys who tried to overturn the 2020 election, then audit it, then avenge it. It will determine whether Lake becomes a cautionary tale for Republicans, or a figure to rally around — the embodiment of a weak party that the base can’t trust.

Notable

  • In the Washington Post, Isaac Stanley-Becker and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez reconstruct the Kari Lake campaign’s losing strategy — a total confidence that the MAGA theory of 2020 was right, and that Republicans didn’t need to win over swing voters or lock in early ballots to beat Katie Hobbs.
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The Map

National. Marianne Levine polls Senate Republicans on how much they want South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott to run for president … Jonathan Martin listens to the awkward 2024 conversations that Democrats and Republicans pretend they’re not having … Kevin Robillard asks why no Democrat wants to run the party’s Senate campaign committee.

California. Josie Huang profiles Kenneth Mejia, the new face of progressive Asian-American politics — a city controller who put the L.A. budget on campaign billboards.

Illinois. Fran Spielman breaks down a union-backed poll that shows Chicago’s mayor in deep, deep trouble.

Virginia. Meagan Flynn watches the jockeying over the first special House election of 2023; the matchup for a safe Democratic seat features three state legislators, one of them an anti-abortion centrist who may be immune to scandals.

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Polls
Jeronimo Gonzalez/Semafor

Voters are dreading a potential 2020 rematch in 2024. Democrats don’t want Joe Biden to run again; just 40 percent of them support it in this poll. Republicans did want Donald Trump to run again, but they soured on him as his endorsed candidates fumbled away midterm swing races, and soured some more when it happened again in Georgia last week. Trump trails DeSantis by 23 points in a hypothetical race for the 2024 GOP nomination, and DeSantis out-runs him in a race with Biden where he’d offer generational change — he’ll be 46 on Election Day 2024, while Biden will be 81 and Trump will be 78.

Jeronimo Gonzalez/Semafor

The age of the well-known and unpopular House Speaker is over. Half of the country has no idea who the House GOP Leader is, and more than half don’t recognize the Brooklyn Democrat who’ll replace Nancy Pelosi. Neither of them is as popular as Pelosi was when she first became House Democratic Leader 20 years ago; the first CNN poll after she won that job gave her a 23 percent favorable rating, with nearly three in five Americans unsure of who she was. It takes a few cycles, and a few years wielding power, for voters to firm up their views of party leaders.

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David Weigel

A final autopsy of the 2022 elections

Photo: FLICKR/Gage Skidmore

THE NEWS

It’s over. The re-election of Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock last week wrapped up the 2022 midterms. A few days later, California actually finished counting ballots, and a recount in Colorado confirmed the narrow victory of Rep. Lauren Boebert.

So, we have new clarity on what turned out to be the strongest midterm election for a party holding the White House in 20 years. There was a national shift toward the GOP, but not everywhere. The red wave was strongest in Florida, New York, and parts of California; it was a dribble, or less, in swing states like Michigan. Here are a few key things we’ve learned.

DAVID’S VIEW

New York really was decisive

Republicans wound up with 222 seats, exactly what Democrats had two years earlier, when a series of close races broke against them. The GOP was luckier this year in a contest that came down to just 6,670 votes spread across the country.

First, it pulled off a series of reed-thin victories in districts Donald Trump carried in 2020. Boebert, for instance, escaped the year’s closest House race with a 551-vote win in a district that the former president won by 8.3 percent points. It was the largest red-to-blue shift in any district the Republicans won, but GOP candidates in Iowa and Iowa also pulled out narrow victories while underperforming Trump.

At the same time, Republicans outperformed their 2020 numbers in some states Democrats hoped would be strongholds, pulling off their most decisive win in New York. The fifth-closest House race, the one that sealed the GOP majority, was won by Mike Lawler over Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney. Lawler’s 1,787-vote win represented a 10.9-point shift toward Republicans since 2020, when the Hudson Valley solidly rejected Donald Trump.

Was that the reddest vote shift in New York? No! On Long Island, where Republicans swept all four House seats, they improved on Trump’s 2020 numbers by an average of 16.8 points. Rep. Lee Zeldin won’t run to lead the Republican National Committee after all, but this is why so many conservatives wanted him to.

Republicans won a lot of wasted votes

Gerrymandering worked. As the Cook Political Reporter’s Dave Wasserman puts it, there are “two Houses” — one that Republicans and Democrats drew to safely re-elect their candidates, and one that independent commissions drew, where the vast majority of competitive races unfolded. That also meant a whole lot of votes went to largely uncontested seats, skewing the national numbers.

For the first time in eight years, more Americans voted for Republicans than Democrats in races for the House. The GOP prevailed 51 percent to 48 percent, a 5.9-point red shift from 2020.

But many of those votes were effectively wasted running up the score in places Republicans were going to win anyway — especially after redistricting shored up their safe seats, or Democrats simply declined to put up a candidate. In Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis’s gerrymander turned three swing seats into safe GOP seats, the party improved by 12 points. In Arkansas, where Democrats barely contested anything, the GOP vote improved by 7.3 points.

Democrats also outperformed in their safe seats. In Pennsylvania, they drove margins higher than ever in suburban Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. The same thing happened in Michigan, where Democrats actually improved on Joe Biden’s 2020 performance by 0.2 points by winning landslides in Grand Rapids, suburban Detroit, and Flint.

Looking just at seats that both parties bothered to run candidates, Republicans won the national vote by just 1.3 points overall, which helps explain their modest pickups.

The 2024 House battle starts in Biden districts where MAGA candidates don’t fly

Emphasis on “starts.” Ohio and North Carolina Republicans may use their new state supreme court majorities to alter their maps, just as they ask the Supreme Court to let legislatures gerrymander without judges or independent commissions interfering. Republicans may be able to draw themselves safer seats before they have to go back to the voters.

Until then, the 2024 race starts in the 14 GOP-held seats that Biden carried — most of them in New York and California — and the five Trump-won seats that Democrats held onto or flipped. Democrats held Maine’s 2nd District and Alaska’s at-large seat thanks to ranked-choice voting; they won Ohio’s Toledo-based 9th District, Pennsylvania’s Scranton-based 8th District, and southwest Washington’s 3rd District with populist candidates, facing MAGA candidates who alienated swing voters.

There was a quantifiable performance gap between the most MAGA-aligned Republicans and the incumbents and recruits less associated with Trump, which could point the way to a GOP rebuild if they can choose less alienating candidates in 2024. That was even true in red-drenched Florida, where the 31.1-point swing toward Rep. Carlos Gimenez was the biggest shift toward any Republican in the country, and the 1.2-point shift toward Rep.-elect Anna Paulina Luna was one of the smallest for any Republican in a gerrymandered seat. Gimenez could be critical of Trump, and voted to create the Jan. 6 committee; Luna ran as a next-generation MAGA activist.

NOTABLE

  • The New York Times’ Nate Cohn digs further into the gap between the GOP’s popular vote lead and their tiny majority. One narrative-bucking mystery: While MAGA candidates fared worse, a number of swing seat Democrats did well against more traditional candidates as well.
  • At CNN, Ron Brownstein looks at Trump’s specific problems with independents — 66% of whom had a negative view of him in exit polls — and how that translated to midterm losses.
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Next
  • … 28 days until special legislative elections in Virginia…
  • 70 days until the special election for Virginia’s 4th district…
  • 77 days until Chicago’s mayoral election …
  • 112 days until Wisconsin’s state Supreme Court election …
  • 693 days until the 2024 presidential election.
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