CHARLESTON, W.Va. — When West Virginia Republicans vote in Tuesday's primary, they will have a hard time finding a major candidate on the ballot in any statewide race who openly acknowledges that President Joe Biden won the 2020 election.
Embracing or skirting the line on election denialism has become an unspoken checkoff among Republicans running for governor and Congress in one of the states most loyal to former President Donald Trump. What is spoken — almost constantly — is praise for the party's presumptive White House nominee from a slate of candidates that includes a convicted Jan. 6 insurrectionist as well as the sons of two GOP members of West Virginia's congressional delegation.
Glenn Elliott, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for an open Senate seat, said denying the election outcome was a ''purity test" for West Virginia Republicans.
''You're either with the leader of the party on everything, or you're kicked out. You're not a Republican anymore, you're a ‘RINO,''' he said, using the acronym for ''Republicans In Name Only.'' "That's not a party — that's a cult.''
It's about the worst thing you can call a Republican candidate in West Virginia.
In the crowded governor's race, Secretary of State Mac Warner has said he ''firmly'' believes, like Trump, that the election was stolen, even though dozens of courts and audits have determined the race was fairly decided in Biden's favor.
Warner, whose office oversees West Virginia's elections, has said tech companies, the media and federal intelligence officials worked together to cover up incriminating information found on the laptop of Biden's son Hunter. Warner's statements came a few months after announcing his campaign after years of toeing the line on the 2020 election. The Army veteran said his views have nothing to do with running for office.
''Donald Trump won West Virginia in a landslide,'' former state lawmaker Moore Capito, another candidate for governor, said in response to a question from The Associated Press. ''And I just wish that the rest of the country would run our elections like we do here in the state of West Virginia.''