Pro-Trump lawyer who called for Pence's execution wants to be state GOP chair
Lin Wood lost multiple lawsuits in his quest to steal the election for Donald Trump. Now, he wants to run the South Carolina Republican Party.

Lin Wood, the far-right, Pro-Trump attorney who lost multiple lawsuits attempting to overturn the 2020 election, has announced he is running to be chair of the South Carolina Republican Party, the Post and Courier reported on Monday.
“My decision to run for the office was heavily influenced by my well known desire to reform local and state political parties and return power to the people,” Wood told the outlet. “Here, I want to return power and control of the South Carolina Republican Party to the members of the party.”
Wood is now well-known for filing lie-filled legal challenges alleging voter fraud in the 2020 election, with zero evidence to back them up.
Back in November, a federal judge eviscerated Wood for a lawsuit he filed that sought to block certification of President Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia, with the judge telling Wood that his suit had “no basis in fact or in law.”
Wood’s effort to steal the 2020 election has taken a toll on both his personal and professional life.
He is currently facing the possible loss of his law license in Georgia after he refused to undergo a mental health evaluation from the Georgia State Bar Association, which is looking into possible disciplinary action against Wood.
The Lawyers Club of Atlanta kicked Wood out of their club after Wood said in a Jan. 1 tweet that Mike Pence should “face execution by firing squad.”
“He is a coward and will sing like a bird and confess ALL,” Wood said in the tweet, which has since been deleted, as Twitter permanently booted him from the platform for another tweet, which falsely stated that the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 was “staged” by antifa.
The social media outlet Parler — which has become the platform of choice for white supremacists who were either kicked off Twitter or are boycotting it — also removed a post from Wood in which he also called for Pence to be executed.
“Get the firing squads ready. Pence goes FIRST,” Wood wrote the day after the Capitol riot that saw a pro-Trump mob attacking the Capitol as Congress attempted to certify Biden’s victory.
In an ironic twist of fate, Wood is under investigation himself for possible voter fraud, after he said he voted in Georgia in the 2020 election in Georgia despite being a resident of South Carolina.
It’s unclear what kind of chance Wood has in the race for South Carolina GOP chair.
Trump back in February endorsed Drew McKissick, the current state party chair.
If Wood wins, he would be part of a nationwide trend of Republican state parties being dominated by pro-Trump, right-wing conspiracy theorists.
The Arizona Republican Party, for example, is currently run by Kelli Ward — a far-right conspiracy theorist. With Ward at the helm, the Arizona GOP advocated to overturn Biden’s victory in the state, using violent rhetoric back in December that asked supporters if they were “willing to give [they’re] life for this fight.”
The chair of the Wyoming Republican Party, Frank Eathorne, advocated in January for his state to secede over Trump’s loss.
Many of the Republican House and Senate members who voted to impeach or convict Trump for inciting the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol have been censured by their state Republican parties. Eathorne even seemed to advocate for getting rid of one of its own members, Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY). because she voted to impeach Trump and believes the GOP should move on from the twice-impeached former leader.
Published with permission of The American Independent Foundation.
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