Politics & Government

GOP Bounces Three Candidates From 5th Congressional Ballot

All had their Republican bona fides—essentially, their partisan credentials—challenged.

(Tennessee Lookout)

By Holly McCall, Tennessee Lookout

April 19, 2022

The Tennessee Republican Party Executive Committee voted Tuesday to remove three candidates for the Republican nomination in the 5th Congressional District, including former President Donald Trump’s endorsee, Morgan Ortagus.

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Scott Golden, TNGOP chair, confirmed that Ortagus, Robby Starbuck and Baxter Lee failed in their appeals to be restored to the ballot after the executive committee first removed the three at an April 9 meeting. All had their Republican bona fides—essentially, their partisan credentials—challenged.

Legislation passed in 2019 requires a state party executive committee to notify candidates within seven days of a filing deadline, which was April 7, of exclusion from the ballot. The candidates whose credentials were challenged had seven days to appeal their expulsion from the ballot and the TNGOP executive committee delivered their decision just shy of Wednesday’s deadline.

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Ortagus and Starbuck, both of whom are relative newcomers to Tennessee, have been fighting off challenges to their candidacies for months. The Tennessee General Assembly passed a bill March 29 to require candidates for U.S. Senate of U.S. House of Representatives to be residents of the state for three years. Ortagus moved to Tennessee within the last year. Starbuck apparently moved to the state within the last three years.

A group called the Tennessee Conservatives PAC filed suit days later to challenge the law’s constitutionality.

Starbuck confirmed to a Lookout reporter he has been removed from the ballot and he posted a message on Facebook that said: “The corruption will be exposed. The fight has only just begun. We can’t let RINO’s (Republican in name only) destroy our party.”

In a statement, Ortagus said, “I am deeply disappointed in the SEC’s decision. I’m a bonafide Republican by their standards, and frankly, by any metric. I’m further disappointed that the party insiders at the Tennessee Republican Party do not seem to share my commitment to President Trump’s America first policies. As I have said all along, I believe that voters in Middle Tennessee should pick their representative–not establishment party insiders. Our team is evaluating the options before us.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit network of state government news sites supported by grants and a coalition of donors.

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