The Fort Morgan Times

Lawmaker’s eloquent takedown of right-wing toxicity should serve as a blueprint

- — Reprinted from the St. Louis PostDispat­ch

Ablueprint for battling the toxic extremism currently gripping much of the Republican Party was provided last week by, of all sources, a Democratic state legislator in Michigan. In a floor speech that went viral, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow issued an epic takedown of a Republican colleague who’d called her a sexual “groomer” of children in a dishonest and indecent fundraisin­g appeal -- part of GOP’s nefarious campaign to use school children as tools in their culture wars.

It began with a fundraisin­g email from Republican state Sen. Lana Theis warning, “These are the people we are up against. Progressiv­e social media trolls like Senator Mallory McMorrow (D-Snowflake) who are outraged they can’t ... groom and sexualize kindergart­eners or (teach) that 8-year-olds are responsibl­e for slavery.”

The two senators represent different parts of Michigan and have never run against each other, but McMorrow has been outspoken about opposing the GOP’s cynical “don’t say gay” legislatio­n in Florida and other efforts like it by conservati­ves around the country. That, apparently, was enough to merit a mass email that calls McMorrow, the mother of a 1-year-old, a sexual “groomer” of children.

McMorrow responded with a floor speech in which -- unlike too many other Democrats -- she didn’t play defense or let the right-wing disinforma­tion machine set the parameters of the debate. With appropriat­e outrage but impressive eloquence, she took the fight to them, exposing their hypocrisy and demagoguer­y in the process.

“I am a straight, white, Christian, married suburban mom who knows that the very notion that learning about slavery, or redlining, or systemic racism somehow means that children are being taught to feel bad or hate themselves because they are white is absolute nonsense,” McMorrow said. “No one in this room is responsibl­e for slavery ... (but) we can’t pretend that it didn’t happen or deny people their very right to exist.”

That is, in essence, what Republican legislatur­es are trying to do. On sexual orientatio­n issues, as with the supposed danger of “critical race theory,” they are writing classroom gag laws in such vague and sweeping language as to intimidate schools away from any discussion of race or gender.

The stakes are clear. “I want every child in this state to feel seen, heard, and supported, not marginaliz­ed and targeted because they are not straight, white, and Christian,” McMorrow said. “We cannot let hateful people tell you otherwise.”

“So ... call me whatever you want,” she concluded. “I hope you brought in a few dollars. I hope it made you sleep good last night. I know who I am. I know what faith and service means and what it calls for in this moment. We will not let hate win.”

McMorrow’s speech forcefully exposed this crowd for the rhetorical terrorists they are. Other Democrats and Republican­s of conscience should take a page from it.

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