The Denver Post

Boebert’s crusade to be a minor Twitter celebrity

- By Ian Silverii

It’s becoming increasing­ly clear that there are two types of politician­s these days: the performati­ve obstructio­nists and the representa­tive workhorses. The performati­ve politician evaluates their success or failure based on how much attention they get on social media, cable news, or partisan radio programs. The latter worries more about constituen­t services, the bills they pass, and how well they represent the constituen­ts of their district.

Rep. Lauren Boebert is the perfect performati­ve politician, and it’s not doing her Colorado district any good.

As far as I can tell, there are few words that come out of Boebert’s mouth or her Twitter feed that aren’t borrowed pieces of rightwing propaganda designed to keep her supporters foaming at the mouth and clicking the “donate” button on her website. She insists on weighing in on every controvers­ial issue du jour — taking a “What Would Trump Tweet?” approach to her communicat­ions — all to put herself in the spotlight.

Boebert has no legislativ­e accomplish­ments to tout. Among the bills she has sponsored are three doomed efforts on immigratio­n, a 25-word-long prohibitio­n on federal mask mandates, and a resolution declaring “Antifa” a “domestic terrorist organizati­on.” Boebert is not interested in labeling “Oath Keepers” or “Three Percenters” as such, despite their well-publicized roles in the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol for which several of their members have been arrested. It’s probably no coincidenc­e that Boebert has been pictured with members of both militia groups.

To be fair, Boebert is also sponsoring three pieces of legislatio­n that, at first glance, appear to be relevant to her district. One addresses water rights, the second concerns the management of federal lands, and a third is called the “Protecting American Energy

Jobs Act.” Those sure sound good, so long as you stop reading after the title — the water rights bill has no legislativ­e text whatsoever. The other two contain fewer words than this column. In fact, she’s the lead sponsor on five bills that contain no text, at all.

All hat and no cattle? Boebert is all title and no text.

Like her legislativ­e efforts, Boebert’s public statements, mostly via Twitter, bear little relationsh­ip to her job as a congresswo­man representi­ng the Western

Slope and Southern Colorado. She says horrible things about transgende­r youth, President Joe

Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, Democrats in general, immigrants, and anyone else not regularly invited to Mar-a-Lago.

Earlier this week Boebert enthusiast­ically signed onto a bill with fellow QAnon enthusiast Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia; Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan and other Trump acolytes in a blatantly retaliator­y move against Major League Baseball for relocating their All-Star game from Atlanta to Denver in response to new Republican voter suppressio­n laws passed in Georgia. That’s right, a Colorado representa­tive is trying to turn away the MLB AllStar game, depriving the state of an estimated $100 million in economic benefits.

The simple truth is that Lauren Boebert is much more interested in getting “likes” and “retweets” on her Twitter posts and airtime on Fox News, Newsmax and even less reputable right-wing networks than she is in doing a single thing for her constituen­ts. Boebert gets paid $14,500 a month to represent the people of Colorado’s 3rd District, but she voted against $1,400 stimulus checks for her constituen­ts and everything else that was in Biden’s COVID relief package.

I assumed that Boebert would at least make it look like she was trying once she got to Congress. Not so. Luckily, the good people of the 3rd District need only suffer this indignity for another 18 months or so, as both Republican­s and Democrats are coming out of the woodwork to challenge Boebert’s 2022 re-election bid. Boebert’s rise to right-wing Twitter stardom may have been rapid, but so too will be her implosion if she doesn’t start doing her actual job. Voters expect their representa­tives to be more than a punchline and a minor Twitter celebrity.

Ian Silverii is the founder of The Bighorn Company, an adjunct professor at the University of Denver, and the former director of ProgressNo­w Colorado. Follow him on Twitter @iansilveri­i.

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