Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE REPUBLICAN CLOWN-CAR CAUCUS IS UNDERMININ­G ITSELF

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WASHINGTON — Already, it is safe to say that the brand-new House Republican majority is off to an awful, abysmal, amateurish and appalling start. And those are just the applicable adjectives that begin with the letter A.

Their embarrassi­ng performanc­e at Tuesday night’s State of the Union address — where President Biden handled their boorish heckling with ease, making them look both obnoxious and ineffectua­l — put them in a hole. And then, for some unfathomab­le reason, they kept digging.

On Wednesday, Republican­s’ first madefor-television, MAGA-themed public hearing fizzled and then backfired. The House Oversight Committee, chaired by Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., set out to prove the conspiracy theory that Big Tech social media companies have colluded with Democrats and the “deep state” to censor conservati­ve views. But the former Twitter executives they hauled in to testify told a different story.

As the company acknowledg­ed at the time, Twitter was wrong to briefly squelch an October 2020 story from the New York Post involving a laptop belonging to Joe Biden’s son Hunter. But the suppressio­n lasted only one day, witnesses said, and was both imposed — and lifted — in an internal attempt to follow company policy. There were no orders from the FBI, as Republican­s have claimed.

But one of the former Twitter executives, Anika Collier Navaroli, said she knew of a government attempt to censor content: In 2019, she testified, a White House official leaned on the company — unsuccessf­ully — to take down a tweet by model Chrissy Teigen that insulted then-President Donald Trump in vulgar terms. Navaroli also testified that when Trump posted a tweet that clearly violated a policy against demonizing immigrants, Twitter relaxed the rule to avoid having to paste a warning label on the offending missive.

Meanwhile, MAGA loudmouths on the committee made sure that no one could confuse the hearing with an actual search for truth. Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., threatened the former Twitter execs with arrest. Reps. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., and Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., complained endlessly about their own accounts being “shadow-banned.”

I try to keep track of polls that show what issues U.S. voters care most about. The alleged shadow-banning of Boebert and Greene doesn’t show up on any of those lists, I’m afraid.

Oh, I forgot to mention that there was a brief power outage in the committee room during the hearing, and that Twitter had some system issues later in the day. “Coincidenc­e?” tweeted Rep. Troy E. Nehls, R-Texas. Uh, yes. Except maybe in the MAGA twilight zone.

You might think that all of this amounts to enough Republican self-sabotage for one week. But you would be wrong.

On Thursday, the House Judiciary select subcommitt­ee on the weaponizat­ion of the federal government, chaired by Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, held its first hearing, with the aim of proving that the FBI and the Justice Department have somehow become … well, I don’t know exactly what, but Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., testified at the hearing, and this is what he wrote in his prepared opening remarks:

“They operate as vital partners of the left wing political movement that includes most members of the mainstream media, Big Tech social media giants, global institutio­ns and foundation­s, Democratic Party operatives and elected officials.”

I will posit that every day Republican­s spend trying to convince voters that the FBI is part of some global, hydraheade­d, Bond-villain leftist cabal is a good day for the Democratic Party.

I can think of ways House Republican­s could more profitably go about trying to highlight mistakes or shortcomin­gs of the Biden administra­tion. I suspect that House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., can, too. But McCarthy owes his job to the MAGA extremists in his caucus, so the GOP majority’s one chance to make a first impression is being squandered on conspiracy theories and personal grievances.

McCarthy can’t afford to alienate any of his members, so he can’t even rid his caucus of a confessed impostor, Rep. George Santos, R-N.Y., despite calls by GOP leaders in Santos’s own district for his ouster. Offended by Santos’s presence at the State of the Union, Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, confronted him publicly and then later described Santos as a “sick puppy.”

“We need a strong Republican Party,” former House speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told me Wednesday. She was serious — and she was right.

I did not share the GOP’s philosophy, back when it had one. But I’ve always believed that progressiv­e ideas are sharper, and progressiv­e policies more effective, when they are challenged by thoughtful conservati­ve ideas and policies.

Right now, we have one center-left political party — the Democrats — and one flaming hot mess of ego, resentment and paranoia. It’s going to be a long two years.

 ?? ?? Eugene Robinson
Eugene Robinson

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