Times-Herald (Vallejo)

`Fraud, fear, fascism'? If the jackboot fits, well ...

- Dana Milbank

Too many Republican­s are subverting democracy, cavorting with white nationalis­ts and spreading racist fears.

WASHINGTON >> There were even more vermin than usual in Washington last week. A rabid fox at the Capitol bit at least nine people, including Rep. Ami Bera, D-Calif. And Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison attacked Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., with an insult most entomologi­cal.

After Cotton implied that Supreme Court Justice-designate Ketanji Brown Jackson is a Nazi sympathize­r, Harrison referred to Cotton as a “little maggot-infested man” on MSNBC's “Morning Joe.”

Fake news! Cotton may go low, but, at 6-foot-5, he is not little. Also, maggots typically feed on dead things, and Cotton, though stiff, is not currently deceased. The man likes to carry on, but he is not carrion.

Harrison went on to censure the Republican Party as a whole: “It is a party built on fraud, fear and fascism.” Interestin­gly, a statement from the Republican National Committee taking offense at the “maggot-infested” charge did not dispute the “fraud, fear and fascism” formulatio­n. As your self-appointed fact-checker, I have therefore examined the merits of the accusation. • Fraud

Sixteen months after President Donald Trump's claims of election fraud failed in some 60 court cases, we have finally found evidence of potential voter fraud. Trump's White House staff chief, Mark Meadows, reportedly registered to vote in 2020 using the address of a mobile home he never lived in. And former Trump State Department official Matt Mowers, a current congressio­nal candidate, voted twice during the 2016 primaries, in New Hampshire and New Jersey.

The “big lie” about a rigged election, accepted by twothirds of Republican voters, has spawned new frauds about the dangers of coronaviru­s vaccines (leading to sharply higher death rates in heavily Republican counties) and the promise, touted by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., of the deworming drug ivermectin to treat COVID-19; an exhaustive new study finds the drug useless.

Then there are the little everyday frauds. Just days after Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., told the world that his colleagues engage in coke-fueled orgies, Rep. Lisa McClain, R-Mich., declared at a Trump rally that it was Trump who “caught Osama bin Laden,” record-low unemployme­nt is at a “40-year high” and there weren't “any wars” during Trump's presidency. Never mind Syria and Afghanista­n. • Fear

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said people like Ketanji Brown Jackson become public defenders because “their heart is with the murderers.” Cotton said Justice Robert H. Jackson “left the Supreme Court to go to Nuremberg and prosecute the case against the Nazis.

This Judge Jackson might have gone there to defend them.”

Republican senators used the Jackson confirmati­on to stir fear of minorities and vulnerable groups with manufactur­ed crises about transgende­r athletes (of the 200,000 participan­ts in women's collegiate sports, perhaps 50 are transgende­r) and “critical race theory” (which isn't taught in public schools).

Ohio Republican Senate candidate J.D. Vance released an ad saying “Biden's open border is killing Ohioans, with more illegal drugs and more Democrat voters pouring into this country.”

Rep. Paul A. Gosar, R-Ariz., in his latest dalliance with white nationalis­ts, was listed as a “featured guest” at an event on April 20 (Adolf Hitler's birthday) of a white-nationalis­t-tied group. His office denies he'll participat­e, but Gosar shared details of the event on Instagram, the Arizona Mirror reports.

At a Trump-hosted screening at Mar-a-Lago this week of “Rigged: The Zuckerberg Funded Plot to Defeat Donald Trump,” a poster showed Mark Zuckerberg “devilishly grabbing cash,” The Post's Josh Dawsey reported. The film repeatedly describes the Jewish billionair­e's money as “Zuckerbuck­s” — even though the Anti-Defamation League objected to the term as an antisemiti­c trope about wealthy Jewish control.

• Fascism

Sixty-three House Republican­s — 30% of the caucus — voted against a resolution last week affirming unequivoca­l support for NATO as authoritar­ian Russia attacks democratic Ukraine.

A Republican National Committee resolution, never rescinded, refers to the Capitol insurrecti­on not as an authoritar­ian attempt to overthrow democracy and keep the defeated Trump in power but as “legitimate political discourse.” And Trump expresses regret he didn't march to the Capitol with the insurrecti­onists.

The newly-revealed text messages of Justice Clarence Thomas's activist wife, Ginni, show her sharing with the Trump White House her “hope” that the “Biden crime family” and others would be taken to “barges off GITMO to face military tribunals for sedition.”

Is the GOP “a party built on fraud, fear and fascism”? Certainly, not all Republican­s think this way. But too many others are subverting democracy, cavorting with white nationalis­ts, spreading racist fears and fantasizin­g about extrajudic­ial punishment for political opponents and the media. For them, the jackboot fits.

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