Internal tumult affects Republicans in Michigan with U.S. presidential poll ahead
The Hindu
Michigan Republican Party in turmoil over dueling conventions, accusations, and infighting, risking support for Trump in battleground state.
A threat of duelling party conventions to choose a presidential nominee this weekend. Accusations of adultery, corruption and incompetence. A barrage of social media attacks and a police investigation.
The Michigan Republican Party is in turmoil, raising fears among some Republicans that support for former President Donald Trump's re-election bid could suffer in a battleground state that Democratic President Joe Biden won by 2.8 percentage points in 2020.
The fight to oust Kristina Karamo, elected as Republican party chair in Michigan last year, has become increasingly bitter and personal, leaving deep divisions in the local party, according to three dozen party members who spoke to Reuters.
At the centre of that battle is Bree Moeggenberg. The 44-year-old member of the Republican state committee — a governing board for the party in Michigan — helped organise a January 6 vote by some committee members to remove Ms. Karamo.
Ms. Moeggenberg and others blame Ms. Karamo — a fiery grassroots activist who backs Mr. Trump's false claims of election fraud — for stifling dissent within the party, a lack of transparency in decision-making, and driving away wealthy donors.
The Republican National Committee — which helps to coordinate the party's fundraising and election strategy across America — ruled in February that Ms. Karamo's removal was legitimate and recognised Pete Hoekstra, ambassador to the Netherlands during Mr. Trump's presidency, as the new chair. Mr. Trump has thrown his support behind Mr. Hoekstra.
Ms. Karamo has contested the vote and the rival factions have announced duelling conventions on Saturday to choose a presidential nominee and award delegates to the party's national convention in July.