The Sentinel-Record

Republican lemmings

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WASHINGTON — What are Republican members of Congress so scared about that they’re still clinging to crazy conspiracy theories about election fraud, even after the Supreme Court has acted and the electoral college has voted? Is there a path back to sanity and civility after the inaugurati­on of President-elect

Joe Biden?

Unfortunat­ely, the road ahead still seems blocked — and not just by President Trump.

Republican House members tell me that there’s a rage in their districts among grassroots GOP voters who believe, without evidence, that the system is rigged and the election was stolen by Biden.

Trump has helped create and stoke this rage, but it’s now broader and deeper than him — and it won’t disappear Jan. 20. Sadly, the only prescripti­on I’ve heard is that “time heals all wounds,” as former Rep. Mike Rogers, a Republican from Michigan, reminded me. In other words, we have to wait this craziness out.

Restoring good governance won’t be impossible, just hard. One overlooked sign of sanity was a provision in the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act sponsored by Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, a Democrat, and backed by Republican­s. It will require that if the Insurrecti­on Act is ever invoked, military and law enforcemen­t units must wear their names and insignia. No more “little green men,” like those that appeared on the streets briefly during the George Floyd protests last summer.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has begun prodding GOP senators toward accepting Biden’s victory and a normal transfer of power. It’s a matter of self interest for McConnell; a Republican party stuck in conspiracy-land could lose control of the Senate, if not next month in Georgia then in 2022.

But Republican leadership in the House under Kevin McCarthy is weak, and in thrall to the extreme wing known as the “Freedom Caucus.” Its membership has grown slightly, from 36 members in 2016 to 43 this year, but its influence far outweighs is size. Where House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has managed, at least so far, to control the noisy liberal wing of her caucus, the Republican­s have failed.

The GOP’s inability to maintain internal discipline leaves it vulnerable to extreme ideas. The worst example of this chaos on the right was the stampede this month to endorse a lawsuit filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. That lawsuit was a legal abominatio­n, arguing that Texas could challenge the election results of four swing states won by Biden, and the Supreme Court promptly rejected it on Dec. 11.

What’s chilling is how 126 House Republican­s signed onto an amicus brief supporting the case. The pitch was led by Rep. Mike Johnson. In early December he contacted fellow Republican­s warning, as one recipient summarized, “The president wants us to sign this amicus brief. He’ll be paying attention to who signs.” When Republican­s protested that the suit was a loser — that it trampled on states’ rights and the Constituti­on — Johnson told them the president wanted it, period.

The herd complied: By Dec. 10, 106 House Republican­s had joined the brief.

The truly scary part is what happened next: Republican­s who hadn’t signed on were barraged by the pro-Trump base back home. “Members who didn’t sign it got crap,” including political and physical threats, a GOP member told me. By Dec. 11, 20 more frightened Republican­s had clambered aboard — boosting the total of signers to 126.

Johnson said the latecomers hadn’t been recorded earlier because of a “clerical error.” Ha! It was raw intimidati­on. The sorriest late endorser for this wild legal document was McCarthy, the majority leader. A few hours later the case was dead.

The next step in House Republican craziness may be a hapless attempt to decertify the electoral college results when they’re presented to a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6. To Trump’s applause, Rep. Mo Brooks has said he plans to challenge electors, rather than “join the surrender caucus.” But to make his challenge, Brooks needs support from one senator.

McConnell wants to avoid this circus, and he advised Republican senators Tuesday not to join Brooks, arguing that the battle would produce a “terrible vote” in which GOP dissenters would be seen as anti-Trump. Trump turned the screw another notch. “Mitch,” he tweeted, “Too soon to give up. Republican Party must finally learn to fight. People are angry!”

Republican­s should stop this death spiral for their own good. House Republican­s gained seats in 2020, even as Trump lost. Argues Rogers: “People said no to Trump and yes to Republican­s all around the country.”

The message is to move on, but it’s hard for Republican­s to hear when they’re hunkered down — still intimidate­d by Trump and frightened by an angry base that seems to have lost the ability to separate election fact from fiction.

 ??  ?? David Ignatius
Copyright 2020, Washington Post Writers group
David Ignatius Copyright 2020, Washington Post Writers group

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