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2020 election deniers and conspiracists lose secretary of state races in key states

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson waving
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson attends an election night party Tuesday in Detroit.
(Carlos Osorio / Associated Press)
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Republicans who backed former President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election lost key races for positions in which they would have overseen elections in some competitive states, but others remained positioned to take those offices in more conservative parts of the country.

Doug Mastriano, the GOP nominee for Pennsylvania governor who was seen outside the U.S. Capitol on the day of the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and regularly communicated with Trump as the then-president tried to reverse his loss to Joe Biden, lost to Democrat Josh Shapiro on election night. The state’s governor appoints the secretary of state, who is the top elections official.

In Minnesota, Republican Kim Crockett, who echoed some of Trump’s lies about voting, lost her bid for secretary of state. In Michigan, Democratic Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson declared victory over Kristina Karamo, a community college instructor who became one of the most prominent election conspiracists in the country. The Associated Press has not yet called the race.

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And in New Mexico, Republican Audrey Trujillo, who cheered on Trump’s effort to reverse the voters’ will in 2020, lost to Democratic Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver.

Races in Arizona and Nevada, major swing states where election conspiracists were competing for secretary of state, remained too early to call. But many democracy advocates and Democrats were cheered by the initial tallies in political battlegrounds.

“Ultimately, some voters likely chose candidates in part because they were committed to telling the truth and protecting election integrity,” said Ben LaBolt, a Democratic strategist.

In the November race for California secretary of state, the candidates seem to agree on one thing: the need to boost voter registration and turnout.

Oct. 12, 2022

Still, in Republican-leaning states, some election conspiracists did win secretary of state offices.

Alabama voters gave the position to state Rep. Wes Allen, who backed a groundless lawsuit to overturn Biden’s victory that was dismissed by the U.S. Supreme Court. In Indiana, Diego Morales, who ousted the Republican incumbent in the party primary by repeating Trump’s election lies, won the race for secretary of state by defeating Democrat Destiny Scott Wells.

Wyoming Republican Chuck Gray, a state lawmaker who also endorsed efforts to overturn the 2020 election, was running unopposed for secretary of state.

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All told, half of the 22 Republicans vying to be secretaries of state have repeated Trump’s election lies. Seven endorsed his attempts to overturn the will of the people and remain in power.

Despite pushes by conspiracy theorists and far-right groups to discredit the electoral process, Arizona election officials have expressed optimism and pride in the work they’ve done leading up to Tuesday.

Nov. 8, 2022

“If they win, we’re going to have someone who’s run on a platform of election denial, saying, ‘Actually, elections are only legitimate when my candidate wins,’ ” said David Becker, executive director of the Center for Election Innovation and Research and co-author of “The Big Truth,” a book warning of the dangers of Trump’s election lies.

In Arizona, state Rep. Mark Finchem, who attended Trump’s rally on Jan. 6, 2021, right before the violent assault on the Capitol, has made clear that he would not have certified Biden’s 2020 win in that state. The GOP nominee in Nevada, Jim Marchant, made the same promise.

Voters in Michigan have enshrined abortion rights in the state’s constitution, matching the success of similar measures in California and Vermont.

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Republican Kristina Karamo in Michigan insisted that Biden didn’t actually win her state, but he did — and by more than 154,000 votes. Before Tuesday’s election, Karamo sued to change Detroit’s election procedures. A judge dismissed the case Monday, saying there was no evidence to support the allegations. On Tuesday, she tweeted a post from a conspiracy-peddling website spreading more doubt on the voting in the Democratic Party’s bastion in the state.

Benson emailed supporters: “You showed the world that Michigan voters will vote for truth over lies. They will vote for facts over conspiracy theories. And they know the value of real results over empty promises.”

In Minnesota, Crockett, a lawyer who echoed some of Trump’s election lies, lost to Democratic Secretary of State Scott Simon.

“I want to thank Minnesotans today for their vote of confidence, not just in me, but in our entire democracy in Minnesota,” Simon said at a party. “Our system in Minnesota is not perfect, but it is fundamentally fair, accurate, honest and secure. And you know what? People in Minnesota know it, right?”

The candidacies of election conspiracists have triggered big spending in the contests, predominantly by Democrats and their allies. Their ads pleaded for voters to think carefully before entrusting such candidates with the job of running elections.

Mastriano, for example, arranged for buses to transport people to Trump’s Jan. 6 rally in Washington, which took place just before the riot. As a candidate, Mastriano promised to appoint someone who would wipe clean the voter rolls, forcing the state’s roughly 8.8 million voters to re-register.

Republican candidates who have made false or misleading claims are running in Tuesday’s primary to become the top election official in Nevada.

June 11, 2022

In Wisconsin, the state’s bipartisan elections commissions oversees elections, but some Republicans want to change that. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers has blocked bills from the GOP-controlled Legislature that would wrest control of voting away from the commission.

Evers defeated Republican Tim Michels, a businessman backed by Trump who had his own plan for making the commission friendlier to Republicans.

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Many Republican secretaries of state did rebuff Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and they won primaries against challengers who questioned that outcome. The most prominent example was in Georgia, where Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger rejected Trump’s private entreaties to “find” enough votes to declare him winner of the state, which Biden won.

Raffensperger’s refusal infuriated Trump, who recruited a primary challenger who lost badly in the May primary. Raffensperger defeated Democratic state Sen. Bee Nguyen on Tuesday to hold onto his post.

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