ATLANTA — Amy Kremer stood near the White House on Jan. 6, 2021, and told thousands of Donald Trump's supporters that the 2020 presidential election was fraudulent.
''Hello, deplorables,'' she said, embracing a label Hillary Clinton once lobbed against Trump's followers.
Kremer, a conservative activist from suburban Atlanta, wasn't part of the mob that hours later stormed the Capitol as Congress met to certify Democrat Joe Biden as Trump's successor. But it was Kremer's group that secured the permit for the ''Save America'' rally where Trump told the crowd to ''fight like hell,'' and she was among the most active fundraisers in the ''Stop the Steal'' movement advancing the lie that Biden's victory was stolen.
As Trump seeks a return to the White House, Kremer is trying to win one of two Georgia seats on the Republican National Committee. The votes at a state party convention Saturday are expected to show how consumed by the 2020 election the GOP remains in Georgia and everywhere else.
Kremer argues the RNC hasn't done enough to fight for Trump or protect others who fought for him, like the 16 Georgia Republicans who falsely claimed to be valid Trump electors in a state Joe Biden won.
''It's not enough to just espouse conservatism anymore,'' Kremer told a party group on April 24. "We have to stand up and fight. And the RNC has not done it.''
But like many other state parties, Georgia's GOP has splintered. Gov. Brian Kemp created a rival fundraising and political operation after Trump attacked him for backing the 2020 election results. The fracture deepened when some party leaders supported former U.S. Sen. David Perdue's unsuccessful, Trump-backed challenge to Kemp in 2022. Neither Kemp nor his allies will attend the convention.
Some Kemp supporters disdain the state party as irrelevant, saying Republican elected officials better reflect the views of all Georgia Republicans. But the party remains a training ground for future candidates, Kemp will only be governor until January 2027 and Georgia's majority-Republican legislature continues to translate activist demands into law.