The Denver Post

It should be Republican­s responding to Boebert’s bigoted punch lines

- By Ian Silverii

Congresswo­man Lauren Boebert humiliated herself, her district, and indeed the whole state of Colorado this week. Again.

This time, Boebert is making national headlines for telling racist, seemingly fabricated anecdotes about her congressio­nal colleague, Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota. Boebert’s comments were so vile that the editorial board of this newspaper felt compelled to apologize to Omar on behalf of the rest of Colorado, which makes me proud to be a Denver Post columnist.

In her short time in office, Boebert has racked up a long and exhausting litany of instances of ignorance, corruption, racism, and hatred toward transgende­r and gay people — not to mention anti-immigrant rhetoric and antimuslim bigotry — along with her persistent efforts to undermine the results of the 2020 election and brush aside the deadly attacks of Jan. 6 by people she herself described as her “constituen­ts.”

But the made up story she told about Rep. Omar was a new low, even for Boebert.

Just before Thanksgivi­ng, Boebert was caught on camera telling a crowd of supporters the following hateful tall tale:

“So, the other night on the house floor was not my first ‘jihad squad moment,’ I was getting into an elevator with one of my staffers, and I see a Capitol police office running hurriedly to the elevator ... I look to my left and there she is, Ilhan Omar, and I said, “Well, she doesn’t have a backpack, we should be fine.’”

A man in a biker jacket can be seen behind her golf clapping a pint glass. Groans and some light applause follow the “punchline,” which is that Rep. Omar might be a suicide bomber.

It was a stem-winder. Boebert made bigotry a bit, a stand-up routine in which she breaks for applause and laughs. She knows where the beats are. It’s amazing she wasn’t selling t-shirts.

This isn’t the first time Boebert told this story — another video surfaced of a Sept. 2 fundraiser in which Boebert tells a version of this lie. It’s rehearsed

House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy says he made sure that Boebert called Omar to apologize. Boebert did talk to Omar, but as she explained in a video on social media a few days later, Boebert instead doubled down on the antimuslim slurs when Omar asked that she make a public apology. In a so-crazy-it’s-almost-predictabl­e moment, Boebert even demanded an apology from Omar instead.

For some perspectiv­e on the matter, I called Colorado state Rep. Iman Jodeh, the first Muslim ever elected to the Colorado legislatur­e. Here’s what she said:

“Congresswo­man Boebert took an oath to uphold the Constituti­on, the foundation­al document of this country. That means she has the obligation to give equal representa­tion to everyone in her district. There are over 100,000 Muslims in Colorado. She calls herself a patriot, but by denying her constituen­ts equal representa­tion and disregardi­ng her oath to the constituti­on, she is not practicing patriotism.”

A few weeks ago, 9News anchor Kyle Clark began publicly wrestling with how to cover creatures like Boebert, who thrive on attention and manufactur­ed conflict: Clark argues that Colorado reporters hold Boebert to a lower standard than other politician­s. Should reporters cover what she says, even if it becomes routine, in the interest of informatio­n and transparen­cy? Or is it better to deny Boebert the limelight?

This is a tough question for media outlets. It should be less complicate­d for the Colorado Republican Party, whose leadership has been dead silent on the matter, but I have a modest proposal for them. They can show support for the Constituti­on, religious freedom, and the rule of law — while standing up to bigotry and hatred — by supporting a primary challenge against Boebert in the 2022 election, or joining the chorus of those calling for her congressio­nal censure or removal from committees. But, of course, they won’t.

That’s because Boebert is a hero to the Colorado GOP. State Republican Party Chairwoman Kristi Burton Brown worked as a staffer on Boebert’s 2020 campaign. Presumptiv­e GOP nominee for governor Heidi Ganahl endorsed Boebert and donated heavily to her campaign. The social media feed of the Colorado GOP regularly promotes Boebert as one of their own. Boebert is the Party. The Party is Boebert.

I don’t personally struggle with the question of how to cover Boebert. The voters in her district deserve to know what she’s saying and doing on their behalf so they can hopefully make a better decision in the next election.

Ian Silverii is the founder of The Bighorn Company, a dad, a husband, and the former director of Progressno­w.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States