NEW YORK (AP) ā By weekās end, the Republican National Committee is set to resolve a bitter leadership feud that has exposed perilous divisions within the institution charged with electing the next GOP president.
Those inside the fight believe the days ahead of Fridayās secret ballot at a luxury seaside resort could get even uglier as rebel forces within former President Donald Trumpās āMake America Great Againā movement threaten to upend RNC Chair Ronna McDanielās reelection bid.
The attacks have been led by McDanielās chief rival, Harmeet Dhillon, a Trump attorney who has accused the incumbent of religious bigotry, chronic misspending and privately claiming she can control the former president ā allegations McDaniel denies. Also in the race is My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell, a pro-Trump conspiracy theorist who secured enough support to qualify for the ballot.
Trump hasnāt made a public endorsement, but he and his team are privately advocating for McDaniel, whom he tapped for the position shortly after his 2016 victory. Still, many Trump loyalists blame McDaniel, the niece of Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, for some of the partyās recent struggles.
In an interview, Dhillon insisted that the overwhelming majority of Republican voters want a leadership change at the RNC. He warned of serious political consequences for any of the committeeās 168 elected members who support McDanielās reelection.
āFor those members of the party who vote not with what the people in their state want but with what their own self-interest is, the next time theyāre up for election, itās going to be an issue,ā Dhillon told The Associated Press.
Apprised of Dhillonās statement, McDaniel said, āThat sounds like a threat.ā She condemned the increasingly ugly attacks against her and the divisions plaguing the committee.
āThereās nobody whoās enjoyed this more than Democrats. I know, because I love it when theyāre fighting each other,ā McDaniel said.
Fridayās vote for RNC chair serves as the latest high-profile leadership test for a deeply divided Republican Party grappling with questions about its future ā and Trumpās influence ā ahead of the 2024 presidential election. The infighting was on public display earlier this month as House Republicans almost came to blows before uniting behind House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, undermined by the same MAGA forces threatening McDaniel this week.
In both cases, Trump has struggled to control his own loyalists, who seem intent on fighting the status quo ā whether McCarthy or McDaniel ā no matter the cost.
Seeking to influence the vote, a group of Florida Republicans from the partyās MAGA wing moved last Friday to hold a vote of āno confidenceā in McDaniel, which Republican groups in a handful of other states have done in recent weeks as well. But the Florida gathering, which drew leading McCarthy detractor Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., fell far short of reaching the quorum needed to hold an official vote.
Still, dozens of anti-McDaniel protesters waved signs outside the event. One read, āRONNA IS THE ENEMY WITHIN.ā
āThe biggest thing is that we want a really strong leader whoās in touch with MAGA, and Ronna just doesnāt have that,ā Lake County, Florida, GOP Chair Anthony Sabatini, who led the anti-McDaniel push, said in a phone interview from a shooting range as gunshots rang out. āSheās lost the confidence of voters.ā
Trump has avoided weighing in on the RNC chair fight at McDanielās request, according to those with direct knowledge of the situation. The former president would endorse her if she asked, but McDanielās team currently believes she will win without his public backing, allowing her to maintain a sense of neutrality heading into the 2024 presidential primary season.
According to its bylaws, the RNC must remain neutral in the presidential primary. Trump is the only announced GOP candidate so far, but other high-profile contenders are expected in the coming months.
Still, Trump could ultimately endorse McDaniel ahead of Fridayās vote if his public support is deemed necessary, according to people familiar with his thinking who, like others interviewed, spoke on condition of anonymity to share internal discussions.
At least three top Trump lieutenants ā senior advisers Susie Wiles, Chris LaCivita and Clayton Henson ā are planning to attend this weekās three-day RNC winter meeting in Southern California, where the vote will play out. While they are not attending specifically on McDanielās behalf, Trumpās team is making clear in private conversations that he backs McDaniel.
McDanielās unofficial whip team is expected to include former Trump chief counselor Kellyanne Conway, former Trump chief of staff Reince Priebus, former Arizona Senate candidate Blake Masters, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins and conservative commentator Hugh Hewitt, she said. Another high-profile Trump loyalist, Maryland RNC member David Bossie, is also backing McDaniel.
Dhillonās guest list is still in flux, but she said over the weekend that her team would likely include former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, MAGA influencer Charlie Kirk and country singer John Rich.
After three consecutive disappointing national elections, there is a broad sense of dissatisfaction among Republican voters and RNC members alike about the health of their party. Some are increasingly eager to move on from Trump and, by proxy, McDaniel, who is viewed as a close Trump ally ā even if many Trumpās supporters outside the RNC membership see her as insufficiently committed to their cause.
āSheās been Trumpās lap dog for four-plus years,ā said Bill Palatucci, an RNC member from New Jersey and a vocal critic of both Trump and McDaniel. While Palatucci formally endorsed Dhillon late last week, he is skeptical she has the votes to defeat McDaniel.
Dhillon has unleashed a torrent of attacks against McDaniel in recent weeks that have resonated across Trumpās MAGA movement. But as the far right cheered, Dhillon may have alienated would-be supporters on the actual Republican National Committee, which is made up of activists and elected officials from all 50 states.
She has seized on several examples of apparent misspending and mismanagement under McDanielās watch, which McDanielās team ā backed by former Trump officials like Wiles ā claim are inaccurate or misleading.
In recent days, the attacks against McDaniel have intensified.
Last week, Dhillon promoted claims that a McDaniel ally raised concerns about Dhillonās faith in at least one private conversation. Dhillon, who is of Indian heritage, identifies as a member of the Sikh religion.
The McDaniel ally has denied the claim, which was outlined in a detailed email to the RNCās entire membership bearing the subject line āReligious Bigotry.ā
Dhillon also highlighted a Washington Post report that McDaniel has said, in multiple private conversations with RNC members, that only she can dissuade Trump from launching an independent presidential bid ā and ultimately destroying the partyās chances in the next presidential election ā should he fail to win the GOP nomination.
āShe said it to many people: Only I can control Trump,ā Dhillon told the AP, likening such a statement to someone believing they could single-handedly stop an asteroid from crashing into Earth.
McDaniel said such claims are āridiculous.ā
āAfter working with President Trump for six years, I donāt think anybody could ever say they control him,ā McDaniel said.
Meanwhile, McDaniel warned of a āhuge riskā if Republicans cannot stop the infighting as the 2024 election season begins. The GOP is well positioned to win the Senate majority and maintain control of the House, although the presidential contest will dominate much of the committeeās focus.
āThis is really critical as we head into ā24 that we stop labeling, attacking, demonizing other Republicans to the point where we canāt bring them together post-primary,ā she said.
For her part, Dhillon said she would āof courseā unite behind McDaniel if she ultimately prevails Friday.
āJob 1 is winning elections,ā Dhillon said. āIām a team player.ā
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Associated Press writer Anthony Izaguirre in Tallahassee, Fla., contributed to this report.
