The Washington Post is out with a new report that highlights the cash–flow conundrum that several state Republican parties have been driven into after MAGA extremists have taken over.
Over the past couple years, conservative activists like Steve Bannon and members of the far-right group Turning Point Action have emphasized a tactic they refer to as the “precinct strategy.” Essentially, it refers to a takeover of the Republican Party at the grassroots level by nominating and electing MAGA acolytes to positions within local party leadership.
And it seems like Bannon and friends have had some success on that front, as several state Republican Party chapters have bent hard to the right since 2020. But in recent months, news reports have highlighted the financial downsides of electing Trump loyalists as party officials. And Monday’s Washington Post report helps to illustrate the pitfalls of such far-right takeovers for GOP chapters in battleground states such as Michigan, Arizona and Georgia, where parties have been usurped by novices with few political ties and toxic political views that come with literal costs.
According to the Post:








