One of the most significant rebukes of midterm candidates who pushed false claims that former President Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election and put another stain on Trump's endorsement record just as he's set to announce plans for running is the defeat of Republican Kari Lake in the Arizona Governor's
One of the most prominent voices in denying the results of the 2020 presidential election lost to the Secretary of State in a race that took nearly a week for results to be counted.
Lake is one of four Republican gubernatorial swing state candidates who lost their races due to questioning or denying the results of the 2020 presidential election.
In addition to Lake's loss in Arizona, a Trump-backed Arizona Senate candidate lost his race to an incumbent senator.
The voters of Arizona rejected the Republican secretary of state candidate who was endorsed by the president.
There are at least four Republican secretary of state candidates who lost their races after promoting claims that the 2020 presidential election results were incorrect.
Many candidates who questioned the results of the 2020 presidential election were defeated in high-profile races, but the majority of other election-denying candidates won at the polls. As of November 10, 220 had won their races.
After the Associated Press called the race for Hobbs, Lake suggested the results were not accurate. Arizonans are aware of BS when they see it. Social media users saw the victory of Hobbs as a rebuke of Lake's false claims that Trump is the winner of the 2020 presidential election.
At 9 p.m., Trump is expected to make an announcement about his future plans. The time is on Tuesday. On the heels of a worse-than- expected performance for the GOP, an announcement has been made. The party is on the verge of holding only a slim majority in the House. Many prominent Republicans have linked the party's failure to create a "red wave" on Trump, and some of his allies have shied away from endorsing him for president in the future. It is not clear if the dislike for Trump among the party's leaders extends to voters. In a new Morning Consult poll taken after the election, 45% of voters said they would vote for Trump in 2024, a decrease of one point from the group's pre- election poll.
The Trump-backed candidates have mixed showings in the mid-terms.
The candidates who supported Trump's loss are turned down.