Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Are Boebert and Greene leading indicators or fringe?

- Greg Sargent is a Washington Post columnist.

In the last week or so, some of the most notorious hardright Republican members in the House have been under fire for anti-Muslim bigotry. So they and their media allies have now hatched a creative new defense for it: Don’t tell us to apologize for our anti-Muslim slurs. After all, we speak for the great mass of voters who make up the GOP base!

You don’t say.

Reps. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., and Marjorie Taylor Greene, RGa., are often derided as fringe figures, based on their dabblings in QAnon conspiracy-theorizing and even trutherism about everything from Sept. 11 to mass shootings.

But it may prove more accurate to regard them as a vanguard of sorts, as leading indicators of the future direction of a certain kind of right wing politics that will continue gaining adherents and intensity.

That’s the message that emerges from this important new Post piece on the intra-GOP war that Ms. Boebert and Ms. Greene have touched off. The Terrible Two have lobbed days of bigoted attacks on Rep. Ilhan Omar, DMinn., prompting Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., to issue a lonely denunciati­on of them. A flame war ensued, and GOP leaders are struggling to broker peace.

The key point here, is that Republican leaders have called on both sides to stand down, but they “have yet to publicly denounce” Ms. Boebert’s and Ms. Greene’s “Islamophob­ic language.”

“Most rank-and-file Republican­s have avoided criticizin­g Boebert and Greene,” the piece reports. The problem here is that Ms. Boebert and Ms. Greene are imperiling GOP chances of taking the House, not their anti-Muslim slurs.

Notably, there isn’t any serious doubt about the bigotry behind these attacks. Ms. Boebert was caught on video recounting that she encountere­d Ms. Omar in an elevator and “joked” that Ms. Omar “doesn’t have a backpack. We should be fine.” Ms. Boebert called Ms. Omar a member of the “jihad squad.”

Then an extended war erupted between Ms. Mace, who denounced such “racist tropes,” and Ms. Greene, who sided with Ms. Boebert, ripped Ms. Omar as a “bloodthirs­ty” terrorist sympathize­r and blasted Ms. Mace as “trash.”

But what’s more interestin­g is the defense of this bigotry evolving in some dark corners of the right. It was neatly expressed in Ms. Greene’s appearance last week on Stephen K. Bannon’s podcast, in which she expressly endorsed Ms. Boebert’s anti-Muslim slurs and ripped Ms.Mace for criticizin­g them.

“We are not the fringe,” Ms. Greene said, by way of rebutting Ms. Mace. “We are the base of the party.”

As that Post piece reports, Rep. Louis Gomert, R-Tex., is now echoing this point, suggesting that Ms. Greene and Ms. Boebert are merely voicing what their constituen­ts believe.

What if this is why GOP leaders are taking a stand-off approach?

Indeed, it’s hard to see all this as “fringe” in another way, if you look at the larger bundle of political tendencies on display here. For a window on to this, listen to that podcast discussion, which devolved into an extraordin­arily paranoid, angry and hateful affair.

In it, Ms. Greene and Mr. Bannon tell a story: Everything the right does is justified as a rearguard response to a totalitari­an left that comprises everyone from the likes of Ms. Omar all the way to mainstream media organizati­ons and the most centrist of Democrats.

This leftist enemy, rages Ms. Greene, calls right-wingers like herself “insurrecti­onists.” Never mind that Ms. Greene actually has endorsed political violence against the legitimate opposition and actually did hail the violent Jan. 6 rioters as heroes.

This leftist enemy, seethes Ms. Greene, “want all of us gone.” In this telling, the bigotry directed at Ms. Omar is justified, not just because Ms. Omar actually is personally a member of the terrorist enemy within, but also because she belongs to this more overarchin­g monolithic leftist enemy that ceaselessl­y victimizes, persecutes and oppresses virtuous right wingers in every conceivabl­e way.

How “fringe” is this, as a worldview?

This week, Vice reported on new videos released by Thomas Klingenste­in, a senior leader of the Claremont Institute, which is developing a faux-respectabl­e Trumpism. He insisted the right is in a “cold civil war” with leftist forces who “want to destroy” the American way of life.

Like Ms. Greene, Mr. Klingenste­in scoffed at those labeling Jan. 6 an “insurrecti­on.” But Claremont employs John Eastman, author of that blueprint to overturn the 2020 election. Mr. Klingenste­in issued a tortured, dishonest defense of Mr. Eastman, which didn’t even disavow his crackpot coup legal theory.

You see, the totalizing nature of the leftist enemy justifies extreme measures like election subversion and nullificat­ion: The overlap with the Greene-Bannon worldview is glaringly unmistakab­le.

Also this week, Sam Adler-Bell reported extensivel­y on the young new right’s intellectu­als. Amid considerab­le variation, what unifies them, he found, is a “pervasive sense that the war for the soul of America has already been lost.” That diagnosis is based on extraordin­arily tortured readings of our current national moment, but it ultimately means any “measures” of “rebellion” are “justified to redeem it.”

I don’t know how many GOP voters Ms. Greene and Ms. Boebert speak for. The fact that GOP leaders won’t condemn their antiMuslim bigotry suggests the answer is probably a lot.

But the broader overlap between all these actors is the key here. This doesn’t mean they all agree with the most lurid Greene and Boebert ravings. Rather, it means there’s a discernibl­e through line uniting many of them: a comprehens­ive unshacklin­g of themselves from any obligation to empirical reality in depicting the leftist enemy, to lay the foundation­s to justify pretty much anything in response.

Can anyone say with confidence that this bundle of pathologie­s is shriveling away rather than metastasiz­ing?

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