Far-right extreme candidates struggled in midterms. Is Trump to blame?

  • While many far-right incumbents won handily, others lost or are in races too close to call.
  • Close races include Rep. Lauren Boebert’s in Colorado and Kari Lake’s governor race in Arizona.
  • “A majority of voters are not buying what Trump is peddling,” said Rusty Hills, a former leader of the state’s Republican Party.

After an underwhelming performance in the midterm election, Republicans across the nation blamed former President Donald Trump, who amplified far-right candidates who underperformed Tuesday, hobbling the party that hoped to take decisive control of Congress and governor’s offices. 

“Donald Trump gives us problems politically,” former House Speaker Paul Ryan told a Wisconsin television station Thursday. “We lost the House, the Senate and the White House in two years when Trump was on the ballot or in office, and I think we just have some Trump hangover. I think he’s a drag on our ticket.” 

Observers pointed the finger not just at Trump but at the far-right candidates who aligned themselves with him. But whoever the culprit, it wasn’t a good night for candidates who modeled their politics after the former president. 

Many of the far-right candidates seeking office lost, like Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania and Bo Hines of North Carolina, who said he would defend Trump’s America First agenda. Others, like Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado struggled in Republican districts.  

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Mehmet Oz, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania, speaks to supporters at an election night rally in Newtown, Pa., Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, as his wife Lisa listens.

Where were the extremists on Election Day? And what did Oath Keepers founder say about Jan. 6?

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, who was disciplined for her inflammatory social media posts early in her first term, won in her deep-red Georgia district, and so did Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, a self-described “firebrand” and “Donald Trump Republican.” But those predictable wins were drowned out by broader Republican struggles. 


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