Analysis reveals source behind GOP 'losing streak' after colossal Georgia defeat

Chuck Hand, Image via Screengrab.

In a GOP runoff primary in Georgia's 2nd Congressional District on Tuesday, June 18, Chuck Hand — one of the January 6 rioters — lost badly to former Trump Administration official Wayne Johnson. Having secured the nomination, Johnson will go up against incumbent Democratic Rep. Sanford Bishop in the general election.

The primary wasn't even remotely close. Johnson defeated Hand, according to the New York Times, by around 31 percent.

In 2022, Hand was sentenced to 20 days in federal prison and six months of probation for misdemeanor charges of illegally demonstrating inside the U.S. Capitol Building on January 6, 2021. During the primary, Hand didn't downplay that conviction — in fact, he treated it like a badge of honor.

READ MORE: Georgia Republican running for Congress openly 'embracing' his role in Jan. 6 riot

But MSNBC's Steve Benen, in a biting June 19 column, stresses that running on his January 6 activities did not serve Hand well.

"If it makes him feel any better," Benen argues, "Hand has a fair amount of company. It was, after all, just last month when another January 6 convict, Derrick Evans, also lost badly in a congressional primary in West Virginia. What's more, some January 6 participants were on the ballot in Virginia last year, and they lost."

The MSNBC columnist and "Rachel Maddow Show" producer continues, "A year earlier, HuffPost reported, 'Many Republican candidates who were directly linked to the deadly January 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol lost their bids for office in Tuesday's midterm elections, in a big repudiation of extremism and GOP efforts to torpedo democracy.'"

Benen notes that although some GOP candidates have successfully campaigned on their January 6 activities, they are the exception rather than the rule.

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"Wisconsin's Derrick Van Orden, a Trump loyalist who rallied outside the Capitol on January 6, was elected as a Republican congressman in 2022," Benen observes. "What's more, there are some other January 6 candidates on the ballot this year, and they might yet prevail. But broadly speaking, those who've tried to parlay their January 6 experiences into successful campaigns have failed. GOP primary voters in Georgia extended that losing streak yesterday."

READ MORE:Congressional candidate convicted in Jan. 6 Capitol riot case walks out on Georgia debate

Steve Benen's full MSNBC column is available at this link.

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