The Arizona Republic

Dr. Oz quacks the code of questionab­le GOP politics

- Your turn Mona Charen Mona Charen is policy editor of The Bulwark and host of the “Beg to Differ” podcast. Her most recent book is “Sex Matters: How Modern Feminism Lost Touch with Science, Love, and Common Sense.”

Sean Parnell, the Trump-anointed candidate for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia, dropped out of the race a week ago after a custody hearing that featured lurid details of his relationsh­ip with his ex-wife. Laurie Snell alleged that Parnell had struck her, choked her, left her by the side of the road and hit one of their sons hard enough to leave a welt on the boy’s back. Parnell countered that she had invented all of it.

Custody battles are infamous for exaggerate­d accusation­s and heated denials, and it’s difficult for outsiders to know whom to believe and how much. But Parnell’s comments off the witness stand didn’t burnish his credibilit­y. Appearing on Fox Nation, for example, Parnell opined, “I feel like the whole ‘happy wife, happy life’ nonsense has done nothing but raise one generation of woman tyrants after the next.” He wasn’t finished. “Now there’s an entire generation of men that don’t want to put up with the BS of a high-maintenanc­e, narcissist­ic woman.” Well. Someone seems to be dealing with anger issues. The would-be – er, rather, won’t-be – senator concluded with a short sermon on biology: “From an evolutiona­ry standpoint, it used to be, you know, women were attracted to your strength because you could defend them from dinosaurs.” Where does the GOP find these geniuses?

So, with the departure of the dinosaur slayer, the field was open for another clown. We’ll come to Dr. Oz in a moment, but first, consider Chris Sununu.

Sununu is the very popular threeterm governor of New Hampshire whom Mitch McConnell had been begging to enter the Senate race in 2022. Polls had shown Sununu running 7 points ahead of sitting Sen. Maggie Hassan. But on Nov. 9, he announced that he would forgo a Senate bid in favor of running for a fourth term as New Hampshire governor. Sununu may not be your cup of tea as a leader – he isn’t mine in all respects – but he has a record. He’s for low taxes, state support for substance abusers, the death penalty, school choice, abortion rights, constituti­onal carry and LGBTfriend­ly measures such as permitting a nonbinary designatio­n on driver’s licenses. Before running for office, he worked as an environmen­tal engineer and then as CEO of a ski resort that employed about 700 people. All told, a serious person with a checkable resume. Unlike some other northeast Republican governors, Sununu endorsed Donald Trump for reelection.

That Sununu, a solid, substantiv­e politician (with an asterisk for his Trump endorsemen­t), has no interest in an easy glidepath to the United States Senate speaks volumes about the state of the national GOP.

That brings us to Dr. Mehmet Oz. Unlike Parnell, Oz is a cardiothor­acic surgeon and professor at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons. He holds degrees from Harvard and the University of Pennsylvan­ia (both the business and medical schools). He could be respected, wellcompen­sated, privileged to devote his career to caring for others, and teaching rising generation­s to do the same.

But that wasn’t enough for Oz. He wanted to be a TV star. With a boost from Oprah, that’s what he became, and before you could say ka-ching, he was hawking “miracle” weight loss drugs.

Maybe prostituti­ng your profession­al credibilit­y for fraudulent products is nothing to get too exercised about. It certainly isn’t new – though the snake oil peddled in the 19th century was at least laced with cocaine or sometimes heroin. But Oz did more than abuse the trust of his audience by selling trash; he veered into outright harm when COVID-19 arrived, advising viewers about a “self-reported” hydroxychl­oroquine study that showed great results. The con man didn’t bother to add the study had not been peer-reviewed and its subjects consisted only of patients who were already near death.

Dr. Oz abuses every privilege life has handed him. He preys upon people with less knowledge and sophistica­tion. He misleads even when it can cause harm. So, naturally, Sean Hannity is ready to help launch his political career.

Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s might have been better off with Parnell.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States