Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Satirical posting falsely quoted senator, said that newspaper printed article

- Informatio­n for this article was provided by Maggie McNeary of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — A fictional comment about the Holocaust, attributed to U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton and purportedl­y printed in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, never appeared in the newspaper’s pages. Instead, it originated in a fictional article on the website of former U.S. Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn.

The dispatch, which falsely claims to come from The Associated Press, wasn’t initially labeled as parody or satire. Franken is a former “Saturday Night Live” writer and performer.

“Sen. Tom Cotton did not speak to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette about the Holocaust. Reports he was quoted in the newspaper speaking about the Holocaust are fabricated,” Managing Editor Eliza Gaines said Wednesday.

AP Director of Media Relations Lauren Easton also disavowed the article.

“This is not an AP story and should not have been labeled as one,” she said.

Cotton, a Little Rock Republican, was sharply criticized this week after telling the Democrat-Gazette slavery was a “necessary evil” in the eyes of the Founding Fathers.

Without it, he has said, the Constituti­on wouldn’t have been ratified, and the 13 states would never have united.

Cotton later said he hadn’t endorsed the Founders’ view. Without the Union, however, no one would’ve been able to stop the fascists and the communists in the 20th century, he posited.

On Tuesday, a fictional story, titled “Tom Cotton — The Holocaust ‘A Necessary Evil’” — was posted on Franken’s website and began spreading via social media.

It claimed Cotton was “embroiled in yet another controvers­y after telling The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that ‘the Holocaust was also a necessary evil.’” It included quotes from a fictional television interview, with Cotton telling Fox News “the editors of the newspaper had ‘taken my words out of context.’”

Without the Holocaust, Israel wouldn’t have been formed, a necessary step before Jesus can return “in the clouds of glory,” the story stated, attributin­g the view to the Arkansas politician.

When posted on some social media sites, the article was mistaken for an actual news report. On Twitter, people have expressed outrage after reading Franken’s creation.

In a statement, Cotton said: “The Holocaust is not a fitting subject for jokes. It’s disappoint­ing Al Franken thinks it is.”

Reached Wednesday evening, Franken confirmed the report was fictional.

He subsequent­ly updated the post, attaching an asterisk at the top and a disclaimer at the bottom.

“The piece was meant to be satirical,” he said.

“Because Sen. Cotton’s remarks about slavery were so racist, people thought that he actually said that the Holocaust was a necessary evil. Let me be clear he has not said that. At least not that I know of,” the former lawmaker said.

Franken and Cotton, while on opposite ends of the political spectrum, are both Harvard graduates and their time in office overlapped.

The Democrat is Jewish and served from July 2009 until January 2018; the Republican is a Methodist, first elected to the Senate in 2014.

Cotton regularly appears on right-wing radio and television news outlets. Franken is the author of a best-seller, “Rush Limbaugh Is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observatio­ns.”

Franken, a Minnesotan, left the U.S. Senate while facing claims of sexual misconduct, bowing to pressure from members of his own party before the Senate Ethics Committee could determine the facts.

Seven current and former U.S. senators later said they had been wrong to demand his resignatio­n, the New Yorker later reported.

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