Miami Herald

These wannabe reality-star Republican­s are totally divorced from reality itself

- BY LAURA PACKARD Laura Packard is a Denver-based healthcare advocate and progressiv­e digital consultant. ©2021 Tribune Content Agency

Iknow a thing or two about the intoxicati­on of instant fame. When then-President Trump blocked me on Twitter a few years ago — I am a survivor of stage 4 cancer who had posted a comment criticizin­g his healthcare plan — it briefly became an internatio­nal story.

It was sort of thrilling, so I get why Republican­s in Congress enjoy the media stoplight. Still, the question should be asked, “What is your spotlight for?”

This year’s cast of QAnon-flavored Republican stars are conducting a reality-show circus, where showmanshi­p is the purpose, and we’re the unwilling audience.

They have put their desire for attention above all else. Passing legislatio­n and constituen­t services is an afterthoug­ht at best. They are focused more on building their personal brands and becoming stars of the TV circuit and Twittersph­ere.

Consider two of the GOP’s rising stars: QAnonfrien­dly extremist Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, of Georgia, and Lauren Boebert, of Colorado.

In September 2019, Boebert grabbed the mic from presidenti­al candidate Beto O’Rourke at a rally in Aurora, four hours away from her home in Rifle, and

rocketed to online fame. She jumped into a GOP primary to keep the spotlight. Unfortunat­ely for Colorado, she won.

Boebert has no interest in legislatio­n. She spoke out against the Equality Act on the floor of the U.S. House, but missed a vote on the act itself while tweeting through it.

Along with more than a dozen other Republican­s, she was too busy heading off to the cameras at CPAC in Florida to bother doing her job.

Following Taylor Greene’s support of hate speech and violence against Democrats, her committee assignment­s were stripped away. She did not care, exclaiming, “I’ve been freed.” What she was freed to do, it turns out, is to continue the trolling and stunts to get more press and TV cameras.

Meanwhile, freshman Rep. Madison Cawthorn, of North Carolina, has created a whole TV-ready backstory around his disability. But like the top reality stars, his self-created story is reality-adjacent at best; he has misreprese­nted his personal and business history, and misled the public about training for the Paralympic­s.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, of Florida, is more concerned about decrying “cancel culture” than doing his job; in 2017, he cast the only vote against a bill to stop sex traffickin­g, an offense for which he has been credibly accused. Gaetz reportedly has told associates that he is considerin­g not running for reelection to take a job at Newsmax, a right-wing media outlet.

All of these Republican politician­s have learned from the best: Our former reality-television star president, Donald Trump, blazed the trail for those seeking to use the spectacle of public office to cash in.

No ethos? No worries, run for office anyway! No policies? No problem, as long as you maintain hold of the microphone. In their pursuit of 15 minutes of fame, they treat the lives of the rest of us as collateral damage.

But this isn’t a television program. The words and votes of these elected officials have real-life repercussi­ons. Rep. Liz Cheney, of Wyoming, was bounced out of Republican leadership for being a little more attuned to reality than reality TV, and current leadership has left reality behind.

After four years of Trump’s antics, many Americans have turned down the volume and changed the channel, but his mid-season replacemen­ts continue. It’s on all of us, the voters in the audience and the show producers in the media to say enough is enough — and cancel them all.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Florida U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz has turned his antics into a potential gig on television.
Getty Images Florida U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz has turned his antics into a potential gig on television.
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