Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

There’s a loony left, too

- ALBERT R. HUNT BLOOMBERG

The Trumpist right, with its conspiracy theories, racist demagoguer­y and blatant lies, should embarrass honest conservati­ves and responsibl­e Republican­s. There also is a loony left, which though less pervasive and powerful, needs to be condemned by liberals.

Its theories excuse efforts to suppress speech by conservati­ves, especially on college campuses. Its attacks on Trump go well beyond acceptable criticism—think of comedian Kathy Griffin with a severed Trump head. Its activists, who include some elected officials, call for impeachmen­t of the president before taking the trouble to build a constituti­onally persuasive case.

Consider Tim Canova, a law professor at Nova University in Florida, who is waging a Democratic Party primary battle against Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz. He has suggested that a young Democratic staffer may have been murdered last year because the staffer, not Russian hackers, leaked the damaging informatio­n from the party’s national committee that sabotaged Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign. He’s downplayed the conclusion of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that Russia meddled in the presidenti­al election, and questions whether he is being hacked by political opponents.

In the Atlantic last week, McKay Coppins reported on leftist conspiracy theorists like the Palmer Report, a blog that focuses on Russia. It reported in April that Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) was resigning because of Russian blackmail. The whole story was nonsense.

Sites like this, Coppins wrote, embrace a world “where it is acceptable to allege that hundreds of American politician­s, journalist­s and government officials are actually secret Russian agents.”

The far left is divided on Russia and its thuggish leader Vladimir Putin. Many progressiv­es are harshly critical, driven by their hostility to Trump and eager to believe that there are Trump ties to Putin.

Canova’s most offensive gambit has been recycling a baseless right-wing conspiracy theory that a young Democratic staffer, Seth Rich, was murdered last year because he leaked the party emails in the presidenti­al election. This was a charge leveled by Alex Jones, the conspiracy-minded talk-radio host and picked up by former House Speaker and present Trump confidant Newt Gingrich. The police found that Rich was murdered after a botched robbery attempt. Fox News retracted its own twisted story on the Rich killing.

Not Canova. Asked whether Rich’s murder may have been related to the leaks, Canova replied: “I have no idea. I wondered what the DNC under Wasserman Schultz was capable of, but I don’t know.”

Calls to the number listed on his campaign website and messages to the designated email site went unanswered.

If this were a unique case, it would be enough to criticize Canova and move on. But anti-Trump passion will tempt liberals to make excuses for radical craziness, just as many mainstream Republican­s have tolerated Trump’s lies, insults and attacks. To keep the high ground, liberals should resist the urge to whip up hostility, and should condemn hate-mongers of the left.

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