The Mercury News

It seems the GOP has become the Grand Old Paranoia Party

- By Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON >> Senate Republican­s have made their choice: They’re putting on their tinfoil hats and staking their political future on transparen­t lies and wild conspiracy theories. The onetime “Party of Lincoln” threatens to become the “Party of Q.”

Every incumbent GOP senator should be asked if he or she supports the party’s Senate nominee in Oregon, Jo Rae Perkins, who avidly promotes the absurd and wholly fictitious QAnon storyline. Adherents see President Trump as a heroic warrior fighting to save America and the world from an evil cabal of “globalist,” sex-traffickin­g “elites” who include moles within the government known as the “deep state.” The supposed proof? Enigmatic posts on anonymous message boards from a so-called “Q Clearance Patriot” who claims to have the inside dope on a coming “Storm” that will wash away this faction and purify the country.

“As people put together more and more pieces of the puzzle,” Perkins told The New York Times, “They can see, yeah, this is real.”

Reality check: No, it’s not. It’s crazy talk, much like the paranoid speculatio­n in Stanley Kubrick’s “Dr. Strangelov­e” that Russians were using fluoride to taint Americans’ “precious bodily fluids.”

It’s unlikely I could find a sitting GOP senator who, if given truth serum, would admit to actually believing such paranoid nonsense. But plenty are willing to play along with QAnon followers by speaking of the imaginary “deep state” as if it were real.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., for example, complained last year about Republican senators “whose allegiance is more to the deep state than it is to the president.” Paul was arguing that the Senate should hold hearings about Trump’s claim that the whole investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election was nothing but a conspiracy to destroy Trump’s presidency.

If paranoid rants like this were just electoral performanc­e art, that would be deplorable enough. But Republican­s are using the power of their office to grant wishes to fantasists like Paul, and to bolster conspiracy­minded voters who crave the feeling that they’re always on the brink of a major revelation.

Senate committee chairmen are reportedly preparing subpoenas for documents and testimony to investigat­e how Trump’s campaign “was treated like a hostile foreign power by our own law enforcemen­t,” in the words of Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., because of “wild theories of Russian collusion.”

Those of us grounded in reality know Russia interfered with the 2016 election in an effort to boost Trump’s chances of winning. The Trump campaign at least welcomed this interferen­ce, and there was evidence of possible collusion — more than enough for Trump’s own Justice Department to launch the investigat­ion by former special counsel Robert Mueller. But for nonbelieve­rs, that’s just what the deep state wants you to believe.

Last week, Senate Republican­s presented, with fanfare, an email that Obama’s national security adviser, Susan Rice, wrote to herself on Inaugurati­on Day 2017 describing a White House meeting two weeks earlier about the Russia investigat­ion. Shockingly, she wrote that Obama insisted the probe be conducted “by the book.”

Wrote Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., on Twitter: “Susan Rice knew exactly what she was doing. That’s why she wrote herself emails in a desperate attempt to cover her tracks.”

So goes QAnon logic: Up is down. Seeming innocence is proof of deviance. And following an unpopular president down a very strange rabbit hole is just another move in a game of three-dimensiona­l chess.

Polls show Trump trailing badly against presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden. Trump, who fancies himself a marketing genius, has so damaged the Republican brand that the party is in danger of losing Senate seats in Montana, Colorado, Arizona, North Carolina and Maine — for starters. Even in South Carolina, Sen. Lindsey Graham is having to worry about Democratic challenger Jaime Harrison, who outraised him last quarter. The GOP’s 53-47 majority is in real peril.

Republican­s could have decided to cut Trump loose and try to save themselves — and, in the end, perhaps some will. But Trump has so remade the Republican base in his own image, including by providing encouragem­ent to a near-cult, that, as party whip Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., told Politico: “I just think that everybody realizes that our fortunes sort of rise or fall together.”

An actor killed President Lincoln. A different kind of fiction may kill his party.

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