Boston Sunday Globe

The GOP’s new political tricks: silencing, censure, expulsion

In Republican­controlled state legislatur­es, Democrats are being undemocrat­ically punished for dissent.

- BY RENÉE GRAHAM Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @reneeygrah­am.

When two Democrats were recently expelled from Tennessee’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, it was clear that what happened in Nashville was never meant to stay in Nashville.

That was the latest salvo in the GOP’s efforts to chill dissent and undermine democracy, one supermajor­ity at a time. Now Montana state Representa­tive

Zooey Zephyr, a Democrat, has been banned from the House floor for the duration of that state’s current legislativ­e session. While she’ll be able to vote remotely, she won’t be allowed to debate.

Zephyr, the first out trans person elected to Montana’s Legislatur­e, has been targeted by Republican­s since speaking out against several anti-trans bills, including one that denies gender-affirming health care to trans youth.

“If you vote yes on this bill and yes on these amendments,” she told her colleagues, “I hope the next time there’s an invocation when you bow your heads in prayer, you see the blood on your hands.”

When Republican­s then silenced Zephyr by refusing to allow her to speak against several anti-trans bills, her supporters protested within the State House, chanting “Let her speak.” Riot police broke up the non-riot and arrested seven people.

Then came the vote to ban Zephyr from the House floor.

“We have a week and a half left in the session and we will be covering important topics — housing bills, the state’s budget,” Zephyr said on CNN shortly after the ban against her passed. “And every bill that goes forward for the remainder of this session, there will be 11,000 Montanans whose representa­tive is missing, whose voice cannot be heard on those bills.”

In a statement, the Legislatur­e’s Republican “Freedom Caucus“said, “It’s unfortunat­e that Rep. Zephyr had neither the maturity nor the humility to take responsibi­lity for his actions and simply apologize.”

Montana Republican­s should — but won’t — apologize for misgenderi­ng Zephyr again. All she is doing is speaking in defense of a community, her community, which is enduring an onslaught of discrimina­tory legislatio­n. According to the American Civil Liberties Union, at least 417 anti-LGBTQ bills, many of them targeting trans people, have been introduced in state legislatur­es nationwide this year.

Not even six months into 2023, that’s already a record high — and a nearly tenfold increase since 2018.

“When the speaker asks me to apologize on behalf of decorum what he is really asking me to do is be silent when my community is facing bills that get us killed,” Zephyr said before she was barred. “He’s asking me to be complicit in this Legislatur­e’s eradicatio­n of our community.”

Decorum is the new Republican buzzword. But in the ways that they wield it, the word has become another euphemism — like the bastardiza­tion of “woke” — to use as a cudgel on political opponents. With its false patina of gentility, it’s the new “civility,” another right-wing tool to shame, suppress, and silence people and opinions they don’t like.

That’s the same tactic Republican­s used to briefly expel Tennessee state Representa­tives Justin Jones and Justin Pearson. Claiming that they and Gloria Johnson, a third Democrat, violated House rules of decorum and procedure, Cameron Sexton, Tennessee’s house speaker, compared them to the Jan. 6 insurrecti­onists who violently breached the US Capitol to stop the congressio­nal certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s 2020 presidenti­al election victory.

Just to refresh — the “Tennessee Three” demanded a legislativ­e response to gun violence after a mass shooter killed six people, including three 9-yearolds, at a Nashville Christian school in March. The Jan. 6 insurrecti­onists wanted to hang Mike Pence.

Logic and truth are lost on Republican­s intent on incapacita­ting constituti­onal rights and democracy. And these attacks show no sign of slowing down. In Nebraska, Democratic state Senator Megan Hunt is being formally investigat­ed for a potential conflict of interest regarding her opposition to an anti-trans bill. Hunt, the mother of a trans child, called the complaint “harassment.”

To keep and expand their power, Republican­s have long employed gerrymande­ring and voter suppressio­n to tilt elections in their favor. This is how so many state legislatur­es wound up with allpowerfu­l Republican supermajor­ities.

Now Republican­s are disenfranc­hising voters by moving to silence, censure, or expel their duly elected Democratic legislator­s. Tennessee was the test case for a Republican crackdown on dissent in state legislatur­es, its expanding quiver of poisoned arrows aimed at the heart of democracy.

 ?? THOM BRIDGE/INDEPENDEN­T RECORD VIA AP ?? State Representa­tive Zooey Zephyr, a Democrat who has been banned from the floor of the House, waved to supporters during a rally at the Montana Capitol in Helena last Monday.
THOM BRIDGE/INDEPENDEN­T RECORD VIA AP State Representa­tive Zooey Zephyr, a Democrat who has been banned from the floor of the House, waved to supporters during a rally at the Montana Capitol in Helena last Monday.

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