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Cowboys for Trump founder survives recall campaign

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SANTA FE (AP) — Cowboys for Trump founder Couy Griffin has prevailed against efforts to recall him from office as a county commissioner in southern New Mexico.

Recall committee spokesman Scott Fredrick said a petition drive collected 1,229 signatures from registered voters in Griffin’s Otero County district, short of what they needed to trigger a special election.

New Mexico requires a number of signatures equal to 33.3% of participation in the previous election. The recall petition fell shy, with about 28% participation as time ran out on Wednesday.

“Since we didn’t meet the signature threshold, there is no next step,” said Fredrick, conceding defeat Tuesday night.

A successful recall election would have allowed Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to select an interim replacement. Griffin can run for reelection in 2022, but told The Associated Press last week that he’s more interested in running for sheriff in his native Catron County or governor of New Mexico some day.

Griffin has resumed traveling to political speaking engagements — in Texas, Montana and Arizona — while burnishing his image in a new video documentary as a God-fearing “peaceful patriot” who stands in solidarity with about 70 defendants jailed on charges related to the Jan. 6 siege on the U.S. Capitol.

The failed recall petition accused Griffin of failing to attend commission meetings, using his elected position for personal gain in promoting a support group for former President Donald Trump, improper travel vouchers and violating state restrictions on gifts to public officials.

Griffin described the charges as frivolous and blamed county staff for providing bad guidance on travel reimbursements.

Griffin formed Cowboys for Trump in 2019 with a group of rodeo acquaintances, vowing to hold horseback-riding parades nationwide in support of Trump. He is confronting misdemeanor criminal charges in the Jan. 6. insurrection on the U.S. Capitol, where he appeared on an outdoor terrace and tried to lead the crowd in prayer.

Griffin denies allegations that he knowingly entering barricaded areas of the Capitol grounds with the intent of disrupting government as Congress considered the 2020 Electoral College results, though he openly ascribes to unsubstantiated claims of fraud in the 2020 election.

In a 50-minute online documentary and political origin story released in August, Griffin recounts his own travails inside a Washington, D.C. jail for nearly three weeks after his arrest in the run-up to President Biden’s inauguration. Griffin says he didn’t directly witness violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6 but believes it was perpetrated by militant leftists and not Trump supporters, contrary to extensive evidence.

“I myself wear Jan. 6 as a badge of honor,” Griffin says in the film, infused with orchestral tones. “I’m glad that I went on that day. … to stand with my fellow Americans in protest of what will one day be known as the biggest rigged election in American history.”

Biden’s victory was certified by officials in each of the swing states he won and by Congress on Jan. 6 — after Trump’s supporters, fueled by false allegations of widespread election fraud, stormed the House and Senate chambers in a failed attempt to prevent certification of how Americans voted nationwide.

Griffin says the film about him was put together by Trump-allied attorney Sidney Powell and her group, Defending the Republic.

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