Indiana Republican gubernatorial candidate Mike Braun talks to delegates during the state GOP convention on Saturday in Indianapolis. (Photo/Marilyn Odendahl)

 

By Arianna Hunt
TheStatehouseFile.com
June 18, 2024

People are responding to the somewhat unexpected Republican nomination for Indiana lieutenant governor.

Although the mere mention of Trump at the 2024 Indiana Republican Convention Saturday at the Indiana Convention Center summoned applause, Pastor Micah Beckwith still overcame Indiana Rep. Julie McGuire’s last-minute Trump endorsement, securing him the nomination for lieutenant governor for the Republican Party.

Beckwith is a pastor for Life Church in Noblesville and co-hosts a podcast called “Jesus, Sex and Politics.” He also is the executive director of Indiana Family Action PAC and the co-founder of Indiana Coalition Conservatives.

The convention was full of delegates wearing red shirts and election paraphernalia who had passed a cutout of Donald Trump just outside the doors to the convention floor. Inside, Todd Rokita, who would have also needed a delegate nomination if anyone had run against him, entered stage as “Terminator Todd”, complete with red boxing gloves, punching the air and making fight stances.

In his speech before the crowd, Beckwith talked about combating the “woke agenda.”

“Our children are being radicalized in our schools by the teaching of hate and division and are being manipulated with the transgender agenda that is meant to confuse them,” he said. “The woke agenda is everywhere. And it is not going away unless we have strong conservative leadership.”

Beckwith said he did not stand for what the government did during COVID-19 and won’t let those sorts of health measures happen again.

“But that did not stop our government from closing our businesses, telling us what to wear and how far apart to stand, and even forcing us to take an untested vaccine in order to go to work or remain in the military, to go to school,” he said. “But I did not sit on the sidelines and hope for the best. I wrote over 4,500 religious exemptions so Hoosiers can keep their jobs.”

In a controversial 2021 video that has resurfaced with his nomination, Beckwith said that God spoke to him during a prayer and told him, “I sent those riots to Washington, what you saw [Jan. 6] was my hand at work.”

U.S. Sen. Mike Braun, R-Indiana, the Republican gubernatorial candidate, wanted McGuire for his lieutenant governor. Though she did not win, he made it clear who would be in control of a Braun administration.

“My running mate can say whatever he wants. If it doesn’t make sense, if it doesn’t resonate, remember I’m going to be the governor,” he said at the convention in response to reporters’ questions.

“There is no doubt about this: I am in charge. And Micah is going to be someone who works with me. And if he doesn’t, I think that means that it will probably not be as fruitful in terms of what we can get done.”

Beckwith and Braun will go up against the Democrats’ lieutenant governor nominee, who will be chosen at their convention July 13. That person will serve alongside Jennifer McCormick, the Democratic gubernatorial candidate.

“I refuse to turn Indiana over to a Braun-Beckwith team,” said McCormick in a press release. “They are dangerous, divisive, and extreme—and embody the fear and chaos that has taken our state on a dangerous path.

“This year, Hoosiers will have a simple choice. The freedom to choose or the ban of reproductive freedoms. The freedom to learn or book bans. Democracy or insurrection. I know where I stand and I know Hoosiers have had enough of the Braun-Beckwith agenda.”

LGBTQ+ elected members of Indiana government—including Sen. J.D. Ford, D-Indianapolis; Lake Station Mayor Bill Carroll; Bloomington City Clerk Nicole Bolden; South Bend City Clerk Bianca Tirado; Indianapolis City County Council Vice President Ali Brown; Monroe County School Board Member April Hennessey; and Bloomington City Councilwoman Sydney Zulich—released a statement speaking out against Beckwith’s nomination.

“We are extremely disappointed and extremely concerned about the direction of our state with Micah Beckwith becoming the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor. Beckwith banned hundreds of books as a local library board member, telling families and students what they can and can’t read, bringing Florida-style politics to our state, and leading to a backlash from parents and students,” they said.

“We must reject such extremism that threatens to make our state a pariah on the national level. We can’t roll back the historic civil rights gains supported by the vast majority of Hoosiers. A Braun-Beckwith ticket puts LGBTQ rights, women’s rights, workers’ rights, and more all on the line, and Hoosiers have the power to stop them by electing Jennifer McCormick to the governor’s office this November.”

The day after the convention, Anne Hathaway released a statement that she is stepping down as Indiana Republican Chairwoman after just 10 months.

“As the Republican National Committeewoman, I am not leaving, I am just returning to my seat on the committee,” she said in the press release. “I look forward to continuing to represent Indiana within the RNC and to continue to support our grassroots operations across the state as we work to elect our next President, Governor and Republicans up and down the ticket.”

Arianna Hunt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.




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