In Swing Districts, Republicans Lean Into Anti-Crime Message to Court the Center

Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer, a Republican in a tough re-election race in Oregon, is using a law-and-order pitch to appeal to a broad swath of voters and blunt concerns about the G.O.P. agenda.

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In Swing Districts, Republicans Lean Into Anti-Crime Message to Court the Center | INFBusiness.com

Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s race in Oregon’s Fifth Congressional District is one of only a couple dozen truly competitive contests in the country that could determine which party emerges in November with control of the House.

Thirty minutes south of Portland, as rain pattered down from gray skies, Representative Lori Chavez-DeRemer, Republican of Oregon, was at a wedding venue railing against Democrats in her state for decriminalizing hard drugs and accusing them of failing to support local law enforcement.

Progressive experiments with policing, Ms. Chavez-DeRemer told small-business owners gathered for a round-table discussion last week, were largely to blame for the rising crime, overdoses and homelessness that have many Oregonians fed up.

“If you’re going to decriminalize hard drugs across the state, we’re going to pay a price for that,” Ms. Chavez-DeRemer, a first-term congresswoman battling to hold her seat in a highly competitive House district, said to the half-dozen people gathered around a U-shaped banquet table under crystal chandeliers. “We have to make sure that we’re supporting our law enforcement officers.”

While Portland has struggled for years to shake its national reputation as a city in crisis, recent reporting actually finds that homicides and gun violence have decreased since last year, mirroring a national trend of declining violent crime. Still, opioid overdoses across Oregon have soared in each of the last five years, according to the state’s public health department.

And regardless of the facts, Ms. Chavez-DeRemer — like dozens of other Republicans in competitive races across the country, including former President Donald J. Trump — is leaning heavily into a law-and-order message to try to gain the upper hand against her Democratic opponent.

ImageRising crime, overdoses and homelessness have many Oregonians fed up.Credit…Amanda Lucier for The New York Times

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Source: nytimes.com

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