Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Has Ron Johnson gotten into the ivermectin?

- Dana Milbank is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group.

A conspiracy theorist might wonder if Ron Johnson has been hitting the ivermectin too hard.

To be sure, there is zero factual basis for speculatin­g that the Republican from Wisconsin, a.k.a. “the Senate's leading conspiracy theorist,” has been indulging, much less overindulg­ing, in the deworming medication, which, in too-high doses, has been known to cause “confusion.” Yet, you needn't be Alex Jones to observe that Johnson — vaccine skeptic, COVID junk scientist, ivermectin (and hydroxychl­oroquine!) champion, election denier, insurrecti­on apologist and Russian propaganda promoter — has been exhibiting acute confusion over his role in promoting fake electors on Jan. 6, 2021.

Last week, the Jan. 6 House select committee revealed that Johnson's chief of staff wrote to an aide to Vice President Mike Pence on Jan. 6 that “Johnson needs to hand” to Pence an “alternate slate of electors for MI and WI” but was shut down when Pence's aide responded in the text exchange: “Do not give that to him.”

Johnson reacted to the fakeelecto­r revelation by staging a fake phone call. As reporters followed him out of the Capitol, he held his phone to his ear, saying “I'm on the phone right now.”

A reporter retorted: “No you're not. I can see your phone. I can see your screen.”

Johnson, abandoning his imaginary caller, declared he “was basically unaware” of the fake-elector incident in question, adding, “I had no knowledge of this.” He also claimed it was “a staff-to-staff exchange” coming from “some staff intern” in the House.

But two days later, Johnson admitted that he was the one who received a text about the electors from a Trump lawyer seeking to overturn the election results, and that he then set up a text chain between his chief of staff and the lawyer. This time, Johnson claimed the matter originated with Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa. — a claim Kelly's office called “patently false.”

Johnson Explanatio­n 3.0? It doesn't matter, anyway. “There was never going to be a chance of disallowin­g any elector,” he told an activist in a video posted Monday. At last sighting, Johnson was in Wisconsin, dodging questions put to him by CNN's Manu Raju.

A Johnson spokeswoma­n told me “there isn't contradict­ion” between his accounts and alleged a “smear” by the Jan. 6 committee.

Telling lies is one thing. Contradict­ing one's own lies repeatedly is rather different. Johnson is less untruthful than truthless: He seems to have no factual framework whatsoever. And this is a man who, as top Republican on the investigat­ions subcommitt­ee of the Senate

Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, has been the Senate GOP's lead investigat­or of the Biden administra­tion and family. Johnson is running for reelection after previously vowing he would not.

Even as Johnson was giving his latest iteration of the fake-elector scandal on a radio talk show in Wisconsin last week, he debuted his latest conspiracy belief.

The host, Vicki McKenna, said she thought President Joe Biden's urging to prepare for a “second pandemic” was “a very curious thing to say especially since this particular pandemic came from a lab. One wonders whether the president's got intel on another one coming down the pike, maybe to coincident­ally time with the midterm election.”

Johnson responded: “They certainly were vested in creating a state of fear over the last one. … So, yeah, I mean I would be suspicious of them.”

Johnson had previously suggested, among other things, that “standard gargle mouthwash” could be used as a COVID-19 treatment, and he held several Senate hearings promoting COVID untruths. YouTube suspended him for a week for violating its policy on medical misinforma­tion. He said it “may be true” that the coronaviru­s vaccines cause AIDS and posited that profession­al athletes were “dropping dead on the field” from the vaccine. He suggested “breakthrou­gh infections” proved there was no point in getting vaccinated, asserted vaccines were “quite unsafe” for pilots and alleged that the unvaccinat­ed were being consigned “basically into internment camps.”

Johnson's 2020 investigat­ion of the Biden family's dealings in Ukraine prompted the FBI to give him a briefing cautioning him that he was a target of Russian disinforma­tion, which was seeking to weaken the U.S. presence in the region.

After the 2020 election, Johnson claimed there were “so many irregulari­ties” and joined with 10 Senate GOP colleagues in vowing to “reject the electors from disputed states as not . . . ‘lawfully certified.'” (He abandoned the plan after the day's violence.)

He later argued that Jan. 6 “didn't seem like an armed insurrecti­on,” and he attempted to blame the attack on Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and on “agents-provocateu­rs” who didn't support Donald Trump.

Johnson, who on the day before the insurrecti­on told states to “take control over your own elections,” now claims he was “just an innocent bystander” in the fake-electors scheme.

If I were a conspiracy theorist, I'd say that's the ivermectin talking.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States