Los Angeles Times

Nazis are again invoked in a GOP attack

Rep. Garcia likens Biden administra­tion to Third Reich. Rival denounces comments.

- By Melanie Mason

Rep. Mike Garcia, a Republican who faces one of the most competitiv­e House races in the country, likened the Biden administra­tion to the Nazi regime during an interview on a conservati­ve podcast last week.

Referencin­g the recent FBI search for classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, the Florida residence of former President Trump, Garcia accused the Biden administra­tion and what he called the “deep state” of “weaponizin­g federal agencies” for political purposes.

“This is literally tyranny of a majority right now that is acting more like a Third Reich than they are the United States. And this is very dangerous,” Garcia told Sara Carter, a right-leaning media personalit­y, on her eponymous podcast.

Trump’s most stalwart backers increasing­ly use incendiary language, including references to Nazi Germany, to defend the former president. But unlike those safely ensconced in a deep red district, Garcia is locked in a hotly contested reelection battle for his northern Los Angeles County district that will hinge on his ability to win over independen­ts and Democrats, not just the GOP base.

After last year’s redistrict­ing process, Democrats have a 12-percentage-point registrati­on advantage in the 27th Congressio­nal District, which includes the cities of Palmdale, Lancaster and Santa Clarita. The redrawn lines made Garcia one of the most vulnerable Republican incumbents in the nation and a top target

for Democrats, who see the seat as a rare pickup opportunit­y.

Garcia is squaring off against Christy Smith, a Democrat and former state assemblywo­man who lost to Garcia in a 2020 special election and came up just 333 votes short in a rematch in November that year. Political prognostic­ators consider the race a toss-up.

When asked about Garcia’s remarks, a campaign spokesman sent a statement: “Mike Garcia has spent a career fighting against tyranny and oppression serving in the military, and no one in Congress values our strategic partnershi­p with Israel more or fights for our Jewish community harder than he does.”

Smith, in an interview with The Times, denounced Garcia’s comments as a “horrific trivializa­tion of the Holocaust” and “a very deliberate attack on the credibilit­y of our governing and law enforcemen­t institutio­ns.”

Facing a more Democratic-leaning electorate, Garcia has tried to pull off a political balancing act. He voted against certifying the results of the 2020 election and against impeaching Trump for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S.

Capitol. But he has emphasized work that has more cross-party appeal, including support for military families and efforts to combat illegal marijuana grows in Antelope Valley.

In a speech this month at the Reagan Library, he called for redefining “America first” as being more engaged globally, breaking from Trump’s isolationi­st streak. And he called for more bipartisan cooperatio­n, denouncing politician­s and activists on both sides of the political spectrum of “retreat[ing] to their caveman tendencies.”

Garcia made similar points in his interview with Carter, lamenting an “usversus-them mentality.”

“It’s easy to divide,” Garcia said. “There’s million ways we can divide — small groups, large groups. The hard work comes in unifying.”

Carter then raised concerns that federal bureaucrac­ies could target political enemies, referencin­g “FBI raids” in an allusion to the Aug. 8 search of Trump’s estate. Garcia said her questions were valid.

“They’re not doing this to try to get a reckoning or to bring justice and have someone held accountabl­e. They do it for political purposes,” Garcia said. “This is why you see the the charges levied, the raids made and in some cases, no charges even brought forward. But then never substantia­ted, ever followed through and then never actually prosecuted.”

The Justice Department investigat­ion into Trump continues; a warrant that was unsealed at the request of Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland showed that the former president is under investigat­ion for potential violations of the Espionage Act, which bars the unauthoriz­ed retention of material related to national defense, as well as obstructio­n of justice laws. During the search, agents removed 11 sets of classified documents — including some marked top secret that were not supposed to be taken outside government facilities.

Smith said Garcia’s remarks added to the divisivene­ss he often bemoans.

“This points to a consistent pattern with Rep. Garcia where he publicly issues one set of performati­ve statements,” she said, “but when he thinks it’s private and in front of a confined, more extreme audience, he has a different story to tell.”

Garcia’s comparison to the Third Reich echoes comments by Trump’s hard-line supporters.

Florida Sen. Rick Scott and Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert compared the FBI to the Gestapo, Adolf Hitler’s secret police. Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona equated the law enforcemen­t agency to Hitler’s paramilita­ry organizati­on, calling for “the dismantlin­g and eliminatio­n of democrat brown shirts known as the FBI.”

Other GOP politician­s denounced the actions by the Department of Justice as those of a banana republic or other oppressive regime.

Such rhetoric has been denounced by other Republican­s, such as Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, who said Scott’s Gestapo analogy was “very concerning to me. It’s outrageous rhetoric.”

He described the heated criticism of federal law enforcemen­t as “dangerous,” pointing to an incident in which, days after the Mar-aLago search, a man tried to breach an FBI office in Cincinnati before dying in a confrontat­ion with police.

‘It’s easy to divide. There’s million ways we can divide — small groups, large groups. The hard work comes in unifying.’

— Rep. Mike Garcia,

Santa Clarita Republican

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? REP. Mike Garcia faces Democrat Christy Smith in the midterm election.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times REP. Mike Garcia faces Democrat Christy Smith in the midterm election.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? AFTER LAST YEAR’S redistrict­ing process, Rep. Mike Garcia, shown in 2021, has become one of the most vulnerable Republican incumbents in the nation. He faces Democrat Christy Smith in the midterm election.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times AFTER LAST YEAR’S redistrict­ing process, Rep. Mike Garcia, shown in 2021, has become one of the most vulnerable Republican incumbents in the nation. He faces Democrat Christy Smith in the midterm election.

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