We The People Are Taking Back Our Nation By Taking Back The GOP

The Left Fears Grassroots Conservatives

Steve Bannon and Darren Beattie talk about the ProPublica article warning the left that the โ€œWar Roomโ€ posse is โ€œseizing control of the GOP. Beattie also responds to MSNBCโ€™s โ€œJoy Reidโ€ worrying about how effective Republicans are at organizing.

Beattie: โ€œI think the article itself calls for congratulations. First congratulations to you for being effective enough that they felt compelled to write this article, and secondly and most importantlyย  congratulations to your audience because more than anything this article exemplifies the juggernaut that is the โ€œWar Roomโ€ audience and how effectively it can be mobilized in order to push back against everything thatโ€™s gone on over the past several years.โ€

The Muscle Comes From The People

Steven K. Bannon talks directly to the โ€œWar Roomโ€ posse about the power of the people, and about how important the ProPublica article was for highlighting the work of MAGA to reform the Republican Party:

โ€œ[ProPublica] understood something was up, and they drilled down with some of their best people โ€ฆ and spent a lot of time on this article. Then MSNBC and the smart guys on the left picked it up and theyโ€™re in freakout mode. Why? Itโ€™s not Darren Beattie. Itโ€™s not Steve Bannon. Very simple. They fear hard-working, taxpaying entrepreneurs that create jobs, the good householder, the good housekeeper โ€ฆ In ancient philosophy, society is based on the good householder, the person that plays by the rules, creates value, serves their country โ€ฆ  sends your sons and daughters, basically patriutsโ€ฆ They so fear you! This is not country club Republicans. The Republican Party hasnโ€™t done this. Theyโ€™re fighting us. Hereโ€™s whoโ€™s doing this. Grassroots organizations and grassroots people and yourself. MAGA and America First. This is what they fear..โ€

The Left Fears America First Invading The RNC And Taking It Over

Steve Bannon and Darren Beattie talk about the ProPublica article warning the left that the โ€œWar Roomโ€ posse is โ€œseizing control of the GOP. Beattie also responds to MSNBCโ€™s โ€œJoy Reidโ€ worrying about how effective Republicans are at organizing.

Beattie: โ€œI think the article itself calls for congratulations. First congratulations to you for being effective enough that they felt compelled to write this article, and secondly and most importantlyย  congratulations to your audience because more than anything this article exemplifies the juggernaut that is the โ€œWar Roomโ€ audience and how effectively it can be mobilized in order to push back against everything thatโ€™s gone on over the past several years.โ€

Precinct Committeemen Hold The Power

American conservatives are taking back the Republican Party and it has those in power worried. The article below was published in ProPublica and it shows just how “Trump supporters” are working to give America back to the people.

Heeding Steve Bannonโ€™s Call, Election Deniers Organize to Seize Control of the GOP โ€” and Reshape Americaโ€™s Elections

ProPublica

The stolen election myth inspired thousands of Trump supporters to take over the Republican Party at the local level, exerting more partisan influence on how elections are run.

One of the loudest voices urging Donald Trumpโ€™s supporters to push for overturning the presidential election results was Steve Bannon. โ€œWeโ€™re on the point of attack,โ€ Bannon, a former Trump adviser and far-right nationalist, pledged on his popular podcast on Jan. 5. โ€œAll hell will break loose tomorrow.โ€ The next morning, as thousands massed on the National Mall for a rally that turned into an attack on the Capitol, Bannon fired up his listeners: โ€œItโ€™s them against us. Who can impose their will on the other side?โ€

When the insurrection failed, Bannon continued his campaign for his former boss by other means. On his โ€œWar Roomโ€ podcast, which has tens of millions of downloads, Bannon said President Trump lost because the Republican Party sold him out. โ€œThis is your call to action,โ€ Bannon said in February, a few weeks after Trump had pardoned him of federal fraud charges.

The solution, Bannon announced, was to seize control of the GOP from the bottom up. Listeners should flood into the lowest rung of the party structure: the precincts. โ€œItโ€™s going to be a fight, but this is a fight that must be won, we donโ€™t have an option,โ€ Bannon said on his show in May. โ€œWeโ€™re going to take this back village by village โ€ฆ precinct by precinct.โ€

Precinct officers are the worker bees of political parties, typically responsible for routine tasks like making phone calls or knocking on doors. But collectively, they can influence how elections are run. In some states, they have a say in choosing poll workers, and in others they help pick members of boards that oversee elections.

After Bannonโ€™s endorsement, the โ€œprecinct strategyโ€ rocketed across far-right media. Viral posts promoting the plan racked up millions of views on pro-Trump websites, talk radio, fringe social networks and message boards, and programs aligned with the QAnon conspiracy theory.

Suddenly, people who had never before showed interest in party politics started calling the local GOP headquarters or crowding into county conventions, eager to enlist as precinct officers. They showed up in states Trump won and in states he lost, in deep-red rural areas, in swing-voting suburbs and in populous cities.

In Wisconsin, for instance, new GOP recruits are becoming poll workers. County clerks who run elections in the state are required to hire partiesโ€™ nominees. The parties once passed on suggesting names, but now hardline Republican county chairs are moving to use those powers.

โ€œWeโ€™re signing up election inspectors like crazy right now,โ€ said Outagamie County party chair Matt Albert, using the stateโ€™s formal term for poll workers. Albert, who held a โ€œStop the Stealโ€ rally during Wisconsinโ€™s November recount, said Bannonโ€™s podcast had played a role in the burst of enthusiasm.

ProPublica contacted GOP leaders in 65 key counties, and 41 reported an unusual increase in signups since Bannonโ€™s campaign began. At least 8,500 new Republican precinct officers (or equivalent lowest-level officials) joined those county parties. We also looked at equivalent Democratic posts and found no similar surge.

โ€œIโ€™ve never seen anything like this, people are coming out of the woodwork,โ€ said J.C. Martin, the GOP chairman in Polk County, Florida, who has added 50 new committee members since January. Martin had wanted congressional Republicans to overturn the election on Jan. 6, and he welcomed this wave of like-minded newcomers. โ€œThe most recent time we saw this type of thing was the tea party, and this is way beyond it.โ€

Bannon, through a spokesperson, declined to comment.

While party officials largely credited Bannonโ€™s podcast with driving the surge of new precinct officers, itโ€™s impossible to know the motivations of each new recruit. Precinct officers are not centrally tracked anywhere, and it was not possible to examine all 3,000 counties nationwide. ProPublica focused on politically competitive places that were discussed as targets in far-right media.

The tea party backlash to former President Barack Obamaโ€™s election foreshadowed Republican gains in the 2010 midterm. Presidential losses often energize party activists, and it would not be the first time that a candidateโ€™s faction tried to consolidate control over the party apparatus with the aim of winning the next election.

Whatโ€™s different this time is an uncompromising focus on elections themselves. The new movement is built entirely around Trumpโ€™s insistence that the electoral system failed in 2020 and that Republicans canโ€™t let it happen again. The result is a nationwide groundswell of party activists whose central goal is not merely to win elections but to reshape their machinery.

โ€œThey feel President Trump was rightfully elected president and it was taken from him,โ€ said Michael Barnett, the GOP chairman in Palm Beach County, Florida, who has enthusiastically added 90 executive committee members this year. โ€œThey feel their involvement in upcoming elections will prevent something like that from happening again.โ€

It has only been a few months โ€” too soon to say whether the wave of newcomers will ultimately succeed in reshaping the GOP or how they will affect Republican prospects in upcoming elections. But whatโ€™s already clear is that these up-and-coming party officers have notched early wins.

In Michigan, one of the main organizers recruiting new precinct officers pushed for the ouster of the state partyโ€™s executive director, who contradicted Trumpโ€™s claim that the election was stolen and who later resigned. In Las Vegas, a handful of Proud Boys, part of the extremist group whose members have been charged in attacking the Capitol, supported a bid to topple moderates controlling the county party โ€” a dispute thatโ€™s now in court.

In Phoenix, new precinct officers petitioned to unseat county officials who refused to cooperate with the state Senate Republicansโ€™ โ€œforensic auditโ€ of 2020 ballots. Similar audits are now being pursued by new precinct officers in Michigan and the Carolinas. Outside Atlanta, new local party leaders helped elect a state lawmaker who championed Georgiaโ€™s sweeping new voting restrictions.

And precinct organizers are hoping to advance candidates such as Matthew DePerno, a Michigan attorney general hopeful who Republican state senators said in a report had spread โ€œmisleading and irresponsibleโ€ misinformation about the election, and Mark Finchem, a member of the Oath Keepers militia who marched to the Capitol on Jan. 6 and is now running to be Arizonaโ€™s top elections official. DePerno did not respond to requests for comment, and Finchem asked for questions to be sent by email and then did not respond. Finchem has said he did not enter the Capitol or have anything to do with the violence. He has also said the Oath Keepers are not anti-government.

When Bannon interviewed Finchem on an April podcast, he wrapped up a segment about Arizona Republicansโ€™ efforts to reexamine the 2020 results by asking Finchem how listeners could help. Finchem answered by promoting the precinct strategy. โ€œThe only way youโ€™re going to see to it this doesnโ€™t happen again is if you get involved,โ€ Finchem said. โ€œBecome a precinct committeeman.โ€

Some of the new precinct officers were in the crowd that marched to the Capitol on Jan. 6, according to interviews and social media posts; one Texas precinct chair was arrested for assaulting police in Washington. He pleaded not guilty. Many of the new activists have said publicly that they support QAnon, the online conspiracy theory that believes Trump was working to root out a global child sex trafficking ring. Organizers of the movement have encouraged supporters to bring weapons to demonstrations. In Las Vegas and Savannah, Georgia, newcomers were so disruptive that they shut down leadership elections.

โ€œTheyโ€™re not going to be welcomed with open arms,โ€ Bannon said, addressing the altercations on an April podcast. โ€œBut hey, was it nasty at Lexington?โ€ he said, citing the opening battle of the American Revolution. โ€œWas it nasty at Concord? Was it nasty at Bunker Hill?โ€

Watch the PrecinctStrategy.com Video

Bannon plucked the precinct strategy out of obscurity. For more than a decade, a little-known Arizona tea party activist named Daniel J. Schultz has been preaching the plan. Dan Schultz failed to gain traction, despite winning a $5,000 prize from conservative direct-mail pioneer Richard Viguerie in 2013 and making a 2015 pitch on Bannonโ€™s far-right website, Breitbart. Schultz did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

In December, Schultz appeared on Bannonโ€™s podcast to argue that Republican-controlled state legislatures should nullify the election results and throw their stateโ€™s Electoral College votes to Trump. If lawmakers failed to do that, Bannon asked, would it be the end of the Republican Party? Not if Trump supporters took over the party by seizing precinct posts, Schultz answered, beginning to explain his plan. Bannon cut him off, offering to return to the idea another time.

That time came in February. Schultz returned to Bannonโ€™s podcast, immediately preceding Mike Lindell, the MyPillow CEO who spouts baseless conspiracy theories about the 2020 election.

โ€œWe can take over the party if we invade it,โ€ Schultz said. โ€œI canโ€™t guarantee you that weโ€™ll save the republic, but I can guarantee you this: Weโ€™ll lose it if we conservatives donโ€™t take over the Republican Party.โ€

Bannon endorsed Schultzโ€™s plan, telling โ€œall the unwashed masses in the MAGA movement, the deplorablesโ€ to take up this cause. Bannon said he had more than 400,000 listeners, a count that could not be independently verified.

Bannon brought Schultz back on the show at least eight more times, alongside guests such as embattled Florida congressman Matt Gaetz, a leading defender of people jailed on Capitol riot charges.

The exposure launched Schultz into a full-blown far-right media tour. In February, Schultz spoke on a podcast with Tracy โ€œBeanzโ€ Diaz, a leading popularizer of QAnon. In an episode titled โ€œTHIS Is How We Win,โ€ Diaz said of Schultz, โ€œI was waiting, I was wishing and hoping for the universe to deliver someone like him.โ€

Schultz himself calls QAnon โ€œa joke.โ€ Nevertheless, he promoted his precinct strategy on at least three more QAnon programs in recent months, according to Media Matters, a Democratic-aligned group tracking right-wing content. โ€œI want to see many of you going and doing this,โ€ host Zak Paine said on one of the shows in May.

Schultzโ€™s strategy also got a boost from another prominent QAnon promoter: former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who urged Trump to impose martial law and โ€œrerunโ€ the election. On a May online talk show, Flynn told listeners to fill โ€œthousands of positions that are vacant at the local level.โ€

Precinct recruitment is now โ€œthe forefront of our missionโ€ for Turning Point Action, according to the right-wing organizationโ€™s website. The groupโ€™s parent organization bussed Trump supporters to Washington for Jan. 6, including at least one person who was later charged with assaulting police. He pleaded not guilty. In July, Turning Point brought Trump to speak in Phoenix, where he called the 2020 election โ€œthe greatest crime in history.โ€ Outside, red-capped volunteers signed people up to become precinct chairs.

Organizers from around the country started huddling with Schultz for weekly Zoom meetings. The meetingsโ€™ host, far-right blogger Jim Condit Jr. of Cincinnati, kicked off a July call by describing the precinct strategy as the last alternative to violence. โ€œItโ€™s the only idea,โ€ Condit said, โ€œunless you want to pick up guns like the Founding Fathers did in 1776 and start to try to take back our country by the Second Amendment, which none of us want to do.โ€

By the next week, though, Schultz suggested the new precinct officials might not stay peaceful. Schultz belonged to a mailing list for a group of military, law enforcement and intelligence veterans called the โ€œ1st Amendment Praetorianโ€ that organizes security for Flynn and other pro-Trump figures. Back in the 1990s, Schultz wrote an article defending armed anti-government militias like those involved in that decadeโ€™s deadly clashes with federal agents in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas.

โ€œMake sure everybodyโ€™s got a baseball bat,โ€ Schultz said on the July strategy conference call, which was posted on YouTube. โ€œIโ€™m serious about this. Make sure youโ€™ve got people who are armed.โ€

The sudden demand for low-profile precinct positions baffled some party leaders. In Fort Worth, county chair Rick Barnes said numerous callers asked about becoming a โ€œprecinct committeeman,โ€ quoting the term used on Bannonโ€™s podcast. That suggested that out-of-state encouragement played a role in prompting the calls, since Texasโ€™s term for the position is โ€œprecinct chair.โ€ Tarrant County has added 61 precinct chairs this year, about a 24% increase since February. โ€œThose podcasts actually paid off,โ€ Barnes said.

For weeks, about five people a day called to become precinct chairs in Outagamie County, Wisconsin, southwest of Green Bay. Albert, the county party chair, said he would explain that Wisconsin has no precinct chairs, but newcomers could join the county party โ€” and then become poll workers. โ€œWeโ€™re trying to make sure that our voice is now being reinserted into the process,โ€ Albert said.

Similarly, the GOP in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, is fielding a surge of volunteers for precinct committee members, but also for election judges or inspectors, which are party-affiliated elected positions in that state. โ€œWho knows what happened on Election Day for real,โ€ county chair Lou Capozzi said in an interview. The county GOP sent two busloads of people to Washington for Jan. 6 and Capozzi said they stayed peaceful. โ€œPeople want to make sure elections remain honest.โ€

Elsewhere, activists inspired by the precinct strategy have targeted local election boards. In DeKalb County, east of Atlanta, the GOP censured a long-serving Republican board member who rejected claims of widespread fraud in 2020. To replace him, new party chair Marci McCarthy tapped a far-right activist known for false, offensive statements. The party nominees to the election board have to be approved by a judge, and the judge in this case rejected McCarthyโ€™s pick, citing an โ€œextraordinaryโ€ public outcry. McCarthy defended her choice but ultimately settled for someone less controversial.

In Raleigh, North Carolina, more than 1,000 people attended the county GOP convention in March, up from the typical 300 to 400. The chair they elected, Alan Swain, swiftly formed an โ€œelection integrity committeeโ€ thatโ€™s lobbying lawmakers to restrict voting and audit the 2020 results. โ€œWeโ€™re all about voter and election integrity,โ€ Swain said in an interview.

In the rural western part of the state, too, a wave of people who heard Bannonโ€™s podcast or were furious about perceived election fraud swept into county parties, according to the new district chair, Michele Woodhouse. The districtโ€™s member of Congress, Rep. Madison Cawthorn, addressed a crowd at one county headquarters on Aug. 29, at an event that included a raffle for a shotgun.

โ€œIf our election systems continue to be rigged and continue to be stolen, itโ€™s going to lead to one place, and itโ€™s bloodshed,โ€ Cawthorn said, in remarks livestreamed on Facebook, shortly after holding the prize shotgun, which he autographed. โ€œThatโ€™s right,โ€ the audience cheered. Cawthorn went on, โ€œAs much as Iโ€™m willing to defend our liberty at all costs, thereโ€™s nothing that I would dread doing more than having to pick up arms against a fellow American, and the way we can have recourse against that is if we all passionately demand that we have election security in all 50 states.โ€

After Cawthorn referred to people arrested on Jan. 6 charges as โ€œpolitical hostages,โ€ someone asked, โ€œWhen are you going to call us to Washington again?โ€ The crowd laughed and clapped as Cawthorn answered, โ€œWe are actively working on that one.โ€

Schultz has offered his own state of Arizona as a proof of concept for how precinct officers can reshape the party. The result, Schultz has said, is actions like the state Senate Republicansโ€™ โ€œforensic auditโ€ of Maricopa Countyโ€™s 2020 ballots. The โ€œaudit,โ€ conducted by a private firm with no experience in elections and whose CEO has spread conspiracy theories, has included efforts to identify fraudulent ballots from Asia by searching for traces of bamboo. Schultz has urged activists demanding similar audits in other states to start by becoming precinct officers. โ€œBecause weโ€™ve got the audit, thereโ€™s very heightened and intense public interest in the last campaign, and of course making sure election laws are tightened,โ€ said Sandra Dowling, a district chair in northwest Maricopa and northern Yuma County whose precinct roster grew by 63% in less than six months. Though Dowling says some other district chairs screen their applicants, she doesnโ€™t. โ€œI donโ€™t care,โ€ she said.

One chair who does screen applicants is Kathy Petsas, a lifelong Republican whose district spans Phoenix and Paradise Valley. She also saw applications explode earlier this year. Many told her that Schultz had recruited them, and some said they believed in QAnon. โ€œBeing motivated by conspiracy theories is no way to go through life, and no way for us to build a high-functioning party,โ€ Petsas said. โ€œThat attitude canโ€™t prevail.โ€

As waves of new precinct officers flooded into the county party, Petsas was dismayed to see some petitioning to recall their own Republican county supervisors for refusing to cooperate with the Senate GOPโ€™s audit.

โ€œIt is not helpful to our democracy when you have people who stand up and do the right thing and are honest communicators about whatโ€™s going on, and they get lambasted by our own party,โ€ Petsas said. โ€œThatโ€™s a problem.โ€

This spring, a team of disaffected Republican operatives put Schultzโ€™s precinct strategy into action in South Carolina, a state that plays an outsize role in choosing presidents because of its early primaries. The operativesโ€™ goal was to secure enough delegates to the partyโ€™s state convention to elect a new chair: far-right celebrity lawyer Lin Wood.

Wood was involved with some of the lawsuits to overturn the presidential election that courts repeatedly ruled meritless, or even sanctionable. After the election, Wood said on Bannonโ€™s podcast, โ€œI think the audience has to do what the people that were our Founding Fathers did in 1776.โ€ On Twitter, Wood called for executing Vice President Mike Pence by firing squad. Wood later said it was โ€œrhetorical hyperbole,โ€ but that and other incendiary language got him banned from mainstream social media. He switched to Telegram, an encrypted messaging app favored by deplatformed right-wing influencers, amassing roughly 830,000 followers while repeatedly promoting the QAnon conspiracy theory.

Asked for comment about his political efforts, Wood responded, โ€œMost of your โ€˜factsโ€™ are either false or misrepresent the truth.โ€ He declined to cite specifics.

Typically, precinct meetings were โ€œa yawner,โ€ according to Mike Connett, a longtime party member in Horry County, best known for its popular beach towns. But in April, Connett and other establishment Republicans were caught off guard when 369 people, many of them newcomers, showed up for the county convention in North Myrtle Beach. Connett lost a race for a leadership role to Diaz, the prominent QAnon supporter, and Woodโ€™s faction captured the countyโ€™s other executive positions plus 35 of 48 delegate slots, enabling them to cast most of the countyโ€™s votes for Wood at the state convention. โ€œIt seemed like a pretty clean takeover,โ€ Connett told ProPublica.

In Greenville, the stateโ€™s most populous county, Wood campaign organizers Jeff Davis and Pressley Stutts mobilized a surge of supporters at the county convention โ€” about 1,400 delegates, up from roughly 550 in 2019 โ€” and swept almost all of the 79 delegate positions. That gave Woodโ€™s faction the vast majority of the votes in two of South Carolinaโ€™s biggest delegations.

Across the state, the precinct strategy was contributing to an unprecedented surge in local party participation, according to data provided by a state GOP spokeswoman. In 2019, 4,296 people participated. This year, 8,524 did.

โ€œItโ€™s a prairie fire down there in Greenville, South Carolina, brought on by the MAGA posse,โ€ Bannon said on his podcast.

Establishment party leaders realized they had to take Woodโ€™s challenge seriously. The incumbent chair, Drew McKissick, had Trumpโ€™s endorsement three times over โ€” including twice after Wood entered the race. But Wood fought back by repeatedly implying that McKissick and other prominent state Republicans were corrupt and involved in various conspiracies that seemed related to QAnon. The race became heated enough that after one event, Wood and McKissick exchanged angry words face-to-face.

Woodโ€™s rallies were raucous affairs packed with hundreds of people, energized by right-wing celebrities like Flynn and Lindell. In interviews, many attendees described the events as their first foray into politics, sometimes referencing Schultz and always citing Trumpโ€™s stolen election myth. Some said theyโ€™d resort to violence if they felt an election was stolen again.

Woodโ€™s campaign wobbled in counties that the precinct strategy had not yet reached. At the state convention in May, Wood won about 30% of the delegates, commanding Horry, Greenville and some surrounding counties, but faltering elsewhere. A triumphant McKissick called Woodโ€™s supporters โ€œa fringe, rogue groupโ€ and vowed to turn them into a โ€œleper colonyโ€ by building parallel Republican organizations in their territory.

But Wood and his partisans did not act defeated. The chairmanship election, they argued, was as rigged as the 2020 presidential race. Wood threw a lavish party at his roughly 2,000-acre low-country estate, secured by armed guards and surveillance cameras. From a stage fit for a rock concert on the lawn of one of his three mansions, Wood promised the fight would continue.

Diaz and her allies in Horry County voted to censure McKissick. The countyโ€™s longtime Republicans tried, but failed, to oust Diaz and her cohort after one of the people involved in drafting Wood tackled a protester at a Flynn speech in Greenville. (This incident, the details of which are disputed, prompted Schultz to encourage precinct strategy activists to arm themselves.) Wood continued promoting the precinct strategy to his Telegram followers, and scores replied that they were signing up.

In late July, Stutts and Davis forced out Greenville County GOPโ€™s few remaining establishment leaders, claiming that they had cheated in the first election. Then Stutts, Davis and an ally won a new election to fill those vacant seats. โ€œThey sound like Democrats, right?โ€ Bannon asked Stutts in a podcast interview. Stutts replied, โ€œThey taught the Democrats how to cheat, Steve.โ€

Stuttsโ€™ group quickly pushed for an investigation of the 2020 presidential election, planning a rally featuring Davis and Wood at the end of August, and began campaigning against vaccine and school mask mandates. โ€œI prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery,โ€ Stutts had previously posted on Facebook, quoting Thomas Jefferson. Stutts continued posting messages skeptical of vaccine and mask mandates even after he entered the hospital with a severe case of COVID-19. He died on Aug. 19.

The hubbub got so loud inside the Cobb County, Georgia, Republican headquarters that it took several shouts and whistles to get everyoneโ€™s attention. It was a full house for Salleigh Grubbsโ€™ first meeting as the countyโ€™s party chair. Grubbs ran on a vow to โ€œclean houseโ€ in the election system, highlighting her December testimony to state lawmakers in which she raised unsubstantiated fraud allegations. Supporters praised Grubbsโ€™ courage for following a truck she suspected of being used in a plot to shred evidence. She attended Trumpโ€™s Jan. 6 rally as a VIP. She won the chairmanship decisively at an April county convention packed with an estimated 50% first-time participants.

In May, Grubbs opened her first meeting by asking everyone munching on bacon and eggs to listen to her recite the Gettysburg Address. โ€œThink of the battle for freedom that Americans have before them today,โ€ Grubbs said. โ€œThose people fought and died so that you could be the precinct chair.โ€ After the reading, first-time precinct officers stood for applause and cheers.

Their work would start right away: putting up signs, making calls and knocking on doors for a special election for the state House. The district had long leaned Republican, but after the GOPโ€™s devastating losses up and down the ballot in 2020, they didnโ€™t know what to expect.

โ€œThereโ€™s so many people out there that are scared, they feel like their vote doesnโ€™t count,โ€ Cooper Guyon, a 17-year-old right-wing podcaster from the Atlanta area who speaks to county parties around the state, told the Cobb Republicans in July. The activists, he said, need to โ€œget out in these communities and tell them that we are fighting to make your vote count by passing the Senate bill, the election-reform bills that are saving our elections in Georgia.โ€

Of the fieldโ€™s two Republicans, Devan Seabaugh took the strongest stance in favor of Georgiaโ€™s new law restricting ways to vote and giving the Republican-controlled Legislature more power over running elections. โ€œThe only people who may be inconvenienced by Senate Bill 202 are those intent on committing fraud,โ€ he wrote in response to a local newspaperโ€™s candidate questionnaire.

Seabaugh led the June special election and won a July runoff. Grubbs cheered the win as a turning point. โ€œWe are awake. We are preparing,โ€ she wrote on Facebook. โ€œThe conservative citizens of Cobb County are ready to defend our ballots and our county.โ€

Newcomers did not meet such quick success everywhere. In Savannah, a faction crashed the Chatham County convention with their own microphone, inspired by Bannonโ€™s podcast to try to depose the incumbent party leaders who they accused of betraying Trump. Party officers blocked the newcomersโ€™ candidacies, saying they werenโ€™t officially nominated. Shouting erupted, and the meeting adjourned without a vote. Then the party canceled its districtwide convention.

The state party ultimately sided with the incumbent leaders. District chair Carl Smith said the uprising is bound to fail because the insurgents are mistaken in believing that he and other local leaders didnโ€™t fight hard enough for Trump.

โ€œYou canโ€™t build a movement on a lie,โ€ Smith said.

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive their biggest stories as soon as theyโ€™re published.

By Isaac ArnsdorfDoug Bock ClarkAlexandra Berzon and Anjeanette Damon

Read Original Article on ProPublica

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Court of Appeals denied Trump adminโ€™s request to block federal judgeโ€™s orders, one of which is to facilitate return of illegal immigrant from El Salvador.

6 Hospitalized After Shooting at Florida State University

After reporting active shooter on campus and locking down, emergency alert system for FSU announced law enforcement โ€œneutralized the threat.โ€

Supreme Court to Hear Arguments in Challenge to Trumpโ€™s Birthright Citizenship Order

Supreme Court left in place lower court orders blocking Trumpโ€™s policy of limiting birthright citizenship for certain individuals and scheduled oral argument for next month.

Multiple Victims After Active Shooter Reported at Florida State University

Police responded to an active shooter report on the campus of Florida State University (FSU) on April 17, with multiple people hospitalized.

Police at Jan. 6 Capitol Rally Ask Supreme Court to Protect Identities in Dispute

Four current and former Seattle police officers who attended Jan. 6 capitol rally ask Supreme Court to protect their identities in dispute.

Trump Pushes for Rate Cut, Says Powellโ€™s โ€˜Termination Cannot Come Fast Enoughโ€™

President Trump renewed his call for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, saying Fed Chair Jerome Powellโ€™s โ€œtermination cannot come fast enough.โ€

Google Violated Antitrust Law With Ad Tech Business, Court Rules

Federal judge ruled Google violated antitrust law in its ad technology practices, marking major loss and potential large-scale changes to its business.
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