The Kansas City Star

Gov. Parson stood up for justice rebuking AG's shameful stunt

MISSOURI REPUBLICAN­S HAVE SHOWN THEY AREN’T PARTISAN ZOMBIES WHO REWARD THE WORST AMONG THEM. THEY REJECTED TODD AKIN AND ERIC GREITENS

- BY DEREK DONOVAN ddonovan@kcstar.com

Three cheers for Mike Parson: Last week, the Missouri governor made a simple statement that really ought to go without saying: “I’m going to tell you this: We are not going to target innocent people in this state.”

Pity he had to do it. Parson was pushing back against the attorney general he appointed, Andrew Bailey, who announced that his office will defend three fellow Republican­s — state Sens. Rick Brattin, Denny Hoskins and Nick Schroer — who are rightly being sued for acting irresponsi­bly on social media in the fog after the Feb. 14 fatal mass shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory rally. The elected officials reshared posts on the social media platform X that incorrectl­y identified an innocent bystander from Olathe as a gunman, and also falsely labeled him an undocument­ed immigrant.

That latter detail wasn’t lost on Parson: “This gentleman did nothing wrong whatsoever other than he went to a parade, and he drank beer and he was Hispanic.”

But this is an election year, and the right-wing outrage jukebox has its greatest hit on constant replay: Menacing hordes of criminals from Mexico and Central America are supposedly laying siege to our southern border — and it’s all part of President Joe Biden’s master plan for them to replace real Americans.

It might be difficult to remember, but before one huge Bill and Hillary Clinton fan, New York City nightlife tabloid fixture and reality TV actor by the name of Donald John Trump pulled off his hostile takeover of the GOP in 2016 with chants of “Build the wall!” at his rallies, most of the party’s leading voices spoke of immigratio­n and the southern border in terms that would get them run out of MAGA town today.

It’s shocking, and more than a little depressing, to watch a video on YouTube from 1980 of then-presidenti­al candidates Ronald Reagan and George H.W.

Bush debating how to treat Mexican immigrants. Bush called for a solution “that would be so sensitive and so understand­ing about labor needs, and human needs, that that problem wouldn’t come up.” “Reluctantl­y,” he added, people who broke laws to make it to this country should “get whatever it is that … society is giving to their neighbors,” underlinin­g that these workers are “really honorable, decent, family-loving people.”

Reagan agreed, noting that Mexico’s high unemployme­nt rate was an opportunit­y for our economy. “Rather than … talking about putting up a fence, why don’t we work out some recognitio­n of our mutual problems, make it possible for them to come here legally with a work permit, and then while they’re working and earning here, they pay taxes here. And when they wanted to go back, they can go back and they can cross. And open the border both ways.”

That’s Ronald Reagan, radical left-wing commie open borders lunatic.

BUSH, MCCAIN

Previous Republican leaders have echoed those humane and businesssa­vvy sentiments more often than not. George W. Bush’s first official internatio­nal trip as president was to to Mexico, to work with President Vicente Fox on the two countries’ “special relationsh­ip.” “We understand that the border we share is a vibrant region that unites us,” he later said in D.C. when Fox returned the visit.

John McCain’s crowning achievemen­t in the Senate was his bipartisan 2005 immigratio­n bill with Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy, which provided a path to citizenshi­p for migrant workers already in the country — a win-win for our labor market and for families seeking a brighter American future.

That spirit of a welcoming, hopeful and lawabiding United States for all has utterly vanished in the today’s Bizarro World GOP. Here, Fox News hosts spend hours defending an ex-president — already found liable by juries for sexual abuse (“rape” the judge said) and massive business finance fraud — as he’s now being tried for business and election interferen­ce felonies. Elon Musk’s X has reinstated previously-banned accounts by actual Nazis, and every time I see a left-leaning post in my feed, the second one below it is proTrump content, often linking to a campaign fundraiser.

In that alternativ­e media climate, is it any surprise that Missouri’s highest law enforcemen­t officer (and eager Fox News guest) might expect support as he goes to bat for his fellow Republican­s — even though he can’t not realize they clearly put an innocent private citizen at risk?

Missouri Republican­s have shown they aren’t partisan zombies who reward the worst among them. They rejected Todd Akin in his bid for Senate after his ignorant comments about pregnancy and “legitimate rape.” And to their great credit, they gave frightenin­g and disgracefu­l Eric Greitens a deserved, humiliatin­g third place in his Senate primary race just years after he resigned as governor amid credible accusation­s of domestic violence, grotesque sexual assault of his hairdresse­r and campaign finance violations.

Conservati­ve voters aren’t stupid. And I like to think they understand fairness and justice when they see them. Missouri GOP stalwart Jack Danforth regrets enabling MAGA insurrecti­onist Josh Hawley’s ladder-climb to the Senate. Trump’s veep Mike Pence and Sen. Mitt Romney are strongly opposing Trump’s bid to retake the White House, unlike previous so-called critics such as sniveling New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu or Sen. Marco Rubio. Nikki Haley, who dropped out of the presidenti­al race ages ago, got 1 in 5 votes in red state Indiana’s Republican primary last week. Trumpbacke­d candidates have lost election after election across the country since he first took office. Why so many people in his party continue to think his endorsemen­t and childish histrionic­s are the golden ticket, I’ll never understand.

So thank you, Gov. Parson, for standing up for the American values most people still remember your party championin­g. You know AG Bailey is wrong, and said so. The Republican bully-boy persona might be thrilling to the belligeren­t voices of your base, but I think the evidence shows it has a short shelf life. And nobody ever regrets backing basic decency and honor. In the long term, it might be a political winner, too.

 ?? NATHAN PAPES Springfiel­d News-Leader file photo ?? Missouri’s governor is right: The state’s highest law enforcemen­t officer has no business defending three state senators who put a target on an innocent man.
NATHAN PAPES Springfiel­d News-Leader file photo Missouri’s governor is right: The state’s highest law enforcemen­t officer has no business defending three state senators who put a target on an innocent man.
 ?? YouTube/TIME ?? Presidenti­al candidate Ronald Reagan had compassion­ate words about Mexican immigrants in a 1980 debate with George H.W. Bush.
YouTube/TIME Presidenti­al candidate Ronald Reagan had compassion­ate words about Mexican immigrants in a 1980 debate with George H.W. Bush.
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