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Risky RINO Removal

301 bytes added, 17:12, August 6, 2021
'''Risky RINO Removal''' is a term that applies to the notion of [[primary]]ing [[Moderate Republicans]] or RINOs in swing or [[Democratic Party|Democrat]]-leaning districts. In [[Delaware]] in 2010, the RINO governor, [[Mike Castle]], was primaried by [[Christine O'Donnell]], the favorite of the [[Tea Party]] , in the race for the [[United States SenatorSenate]] seat vacated in 2009 by [[Joe Biden]], who became [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]] under [[Barack H. Obama]]. However, Tea Party candidates were less electable in [[Joe Biden|Biden]]'s Delaware, and O'Donnell lost the [[general election]] to a Democrat, [[Chris Coons]] a Biden ally who still holds the seat.<ref>http://publicmind.fdu.edu/winsome/final.pdf</ref>
A current example would be primarying Were Republicans to primary the anti-[[Donald Trump|Trump]] [[U.S. Representative]] [[David Valadao]] of [[California]], whose district is Democrat and voted by more than ten points for Biden. Putting an [[America First]] candidate would , the seat could be lost to a risky move which could cost the Republicans Valadao's seatDemocrat, one of whom held it from 2019 to 2021.
The value of [[RINO]]s, particularly in the [[House]], is debatable. When ten RINOs voted for the second [[impeachment and removal|impeachment]] of [[Donald Trump]], the [[liberal media]] falsely portrayed it as bipartisan.==Moderates/RINOs too Risky risky to Primaryprimary==
*[[Susan Collins]]
*[[Carlos Gimenez]]
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