GOP is quietly purging right-wing members -- to replace them with even more radical politicians [View all]
Under cover of the coronavirus chaos and amid our national uprising, Republicans have quietly uprooted some of their most controversial right-wing members of Congress only to replace them with even more radical contenders for federal office, including devotees of the nonsensical QAnon conspiracy theory, ahead of this falls election.
June 16, 2020
By Sophia Tesfaye, Salon
More than 10 years after the Tea Party movement gave rise to the ultra-conservative House Freedom Caucus by targeting longtime incumbent Republicans who were deemed insufficiently right-wing, a recent set of wins by insurgent candidates over some of the most radical Republicans in Congress makes clear that the GOP has now passed every off-ramp on the road to extremism. While the mass Republican retirements ahead of the 2018 midterm elections greatly weakened the GOP, this cycles purging of incumbents in safe red districts, will likely serve to further radicalize the GOP caucus.
On Saturday, in a novel case of voter suppression, a small group of Republicans in Virginias 5th district voted to oust Rep. Denver Riggleman, a far-right Freedom Caucus member who voted with President Trump nearly 95% of the time since winning a competitive 2018 race amid a Democratic wave.
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Bob Good, who defeated Riggleman in that primary, is a fundamentalist zealot and a former athletics director at Jerry Falwells Liberty University. Good essentially ran for office because he was upset by Rigglemans involvement in a gay wedding, calling Riggleman out of step with the base of the party. A born-again evangelical Christian and staunch social conservative, Good wants to end birthright citizenship and opposes abortion for any reason even if the mothers life is in danger.
Republicans have a six-point registration edge in Virginias rural 5th district, so in all likelihood Good will take office as an extremist backbencher who introduces wild bills that go nowhere. But there is a slim chance that Good wont even make the general election ballot this fall, as the Washington Post explains:
Good missed the Tuesday deadline for filing a key form related to his candidacy, but he hand-delivered the form to the state elections office on Friday afternoon, election officials said. The board of elections routinely offers extensions in cases like these, and changing election dates due to the coronavirus may have created confusion about the deadline.
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https://www.rawstory.com/2020/06/gop-is-quietly-purging-right-wing-members-to-replace-them-with-even-more-radical-politicians/