Gender equality is fundamental to a healthy democracy, and greater representation of women in American politics should be one of our top priorities as a nation. But not at any cost. If our democratic system is to thrive, there must be no place in electoral politics for women who push the preposterous ‘big lie’ that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
This election cycle, there are as many as 120 Republican nominees running for Senate, House, governor, attorney general and secretary of state who have denied the 2020 presidential election results. And during the primaries that took place through the end of May, nearly two dozen women across statewide, Senate and House races also pushed this false narrative.
As a result, these candidates are poisoning our system and turning their backs on the rule of law.
In the 117th Congress, no two lawmakers better embody the dangers at hand than Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., – both of whom are up for re-election. Staunch election deniers, they both reportedly appealed to former President Trump for pardons to excuse their involvement in the Jan. 6 insurrection. Rep. Green, perhaps the most dangerous of the extreme MAGA women, has repeatedly endorsed political violence, ascribes to wild anti-Semitic QAnon conspiracy theories, and accused her own Republican colleagues in the Senate of being “pro-pedophile” because they voted to confirm Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. Rep. Boebert has her own ignominious record of “out-Trumping” Trump.
The problem is that while many may want to see Reps. Greene and Boebert as outliers, more women with similar views are also running for office at the state, local and national level. And in some cases, they are winning.
The upcoming primary for governor in Arizona typifies this. If election denier and Trump backed candidate Kari Lake becomes the Republican nominee for governor in the Aug. 2 primary, it could set a precedent that embracing QAnon, Nazi sympathizers and the ‘big lie’ is a winning strategy for women. Given the central role the Arizona recount played in the 2020 Presidential election, a woman like Lake in power could be truly dangerous.
In Texas, Rep. Mayra Flores, R-Tex., who consistently tagged QAnon on her social media and posted conspiracy theories about Jan. 6, claiming the Capitol Police opened the gates for the rioters, won a special election in June and flipped a seat held by a long-time incumbent Democrat. Recently Rep. Flores, who is running for a full-term in November, tried to distance herself from QAnon, but it’s clear that embracing such views helped her get elected.
These women have bet that taking extreme MAGA positions will be good for their political fortunes. But their ultimate electoral success remains to be seen. Five Thirty Eight found that in primary races where there was an election denier running against a GOP candidate who accepted the 2020 election as fair, the candidate who accepted Biden had indeed won the presidency won their own race 54 percent of the time.








