State Republicans Helped Fire Up Mob
Johnson and state’s GOP congressmen, including Gallagher, all helped incite pro-Trump insurrection.
Lucky for Sen. Ron Johnson Wisconsin doesn’t start with an “A.”
Our state’s senior senator was spared the infamy of a floor speech like the one Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz) was giving, repeating the GOP’s false claims about voter fraud and a stolen election, when the angry mob of Trump supporters broke through the Capitol’s doors and windows and began their rampage.
Gosar was not so lucky. He was rudely interrupted by shouts from the balcony and, after fruitlessly calling for order, abandoned his speech and ran for cover from the violent mob he was, up until that very moment, helping to incite.
Sen. Ted Cruz also has reason to regret he had time to give his whole ignominious, dishonest floor speech demanding that the certification of the presidential election be stopped. Cruz suggested that Congress should look to history for a model — in the corrupt deal-making of the Congress of 1876, which pulled the last troops out of the South and ended Reconstruction. That was just before the modern ragtag rebel forces with their Confederate flags burst down the doors.
What was Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri) thinking as he offered a fist pump to the angry crowd outside the Capitol with their guns, “F- Biden” and “Pelosi is Satan” signs? The ambitious Hawley, graduate of Stanford and Yale Law School and a man on the move in the U.S. Senate, staked his political career on his bold, populist stand for Trump, calculating that it wouldn’t cost him anything because, as Sen. Mitch McConnell put it in his floor speech, Republicans who objected to the election could afford to make “a harmless protest gesture while relying on others to do the right thing.”
Not so harmless, as it turns out.
That photo of Hawley with his fist raised is indelible.
In the end, out of 14 senators who said they were going to object to the Arizona election results, only six stayed the course: Cruz and Hawley were joined by Sens. John Kennedy (R-La.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss), Roger Marshall (R-Kansas) and Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.). Johnson — who signed a letter with 10 other Republicans saying they would reject electors from swing states — bailed out. So did Sen. Kelly Loeffler, fresh from her defeat in Georgia. The riot in the Capitol, she said on the floor, was too much: “When I arrived in Washington this morning, I fully intended to object to the certification of the electoral votes. However, the events that have transpired today have forced me to reconsider, and I cannot now, in good conscience, object.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) changed his tune on Wednesday in an impassioned floor speech calling for accepting the election results. He even pointed out that the 1876 compromise was not a great model and had opened the door to Jim Crow.
Too bad Graham spent months pumping up Trump’s false accusations of fraud and tried to strong-arm state officials in Georgia into changing election results to make Trump the winner. Graham gets no credit for his late conversion.
In Wisconsin, the strongest Republican voice of outrage against the riots was Mike Gallagher (R-Green Bay), who said “This is insane, I’ve not seen anything like this since I deployed to Iraq in 2007 and 2008. This is America and this is what’s happening right now. The president needs to call it off. Call it off; it’s over. The objectors need to stop meddling with the primal forces of our democracy. There’s a cost. They think they’re just having a protest debate and they can get away with it because it’s not actually going to overturn the election.”
That’s great. But here’s what Rep. Gallagher had to say in a statement joined by six Republican colleagues just a few days ago: “We, like most Americans, are outraged at the significant abuses in our election system resulting from the reckless adoption of mail-in ballots and the lack of safeguards maintained to guarantee that only legitimate votes are cast and counted.”
“The people cannot trust a system that refuses to guarantee that only legal votes are cast to select its leaders, Gallagher and company added.
Now, the more decorous are turning up their noses at this rabble. But we mustn’t let them off the hook. They deliberately stoked this “insurrection” by enabling their sociopathic president and his lies. They shamelessly played to Trump’s base, cynically stoking its racism, hate and paranoia to advance their own political careers. Now they want to distance themselves from the consequences.
After the Capitol lockdown, Johnson denied that he and Trump bore any responsibility whatsoever for the violent mob stirred up by their ceaseless rhetoric about a stolen election. In an interview with TMJ4, Johnson denounced the violence and then quickly switched back to his same old talking points: “This is an unstable state of affairs in our country, where you have a large percentage of the American population who are not viewing this as legitimate.”
Johnson himself helped create that instability. The results are tragic.
Reprinted with permission of Wisconsin Examiner.
More about the Chaos at the Capitol
- Hayward, WI Man Sentenced for Jan. 6 Attack - Frank Zufall - Jul 17th, 2024
- Police Officer Who Survived Jan. 6 Has a Warning for America - Erik Gunn - Apr 10th, 2024
- 3 Years After Jan. 6 Insurrection Where Do Wisconsin Cases Stand? - Sarah Lehr - Jan 7th, 2024
- Wisconsin Man Arrested for Assaulting Law Enforcement During Jan. 6 Capitol Breach - U.S. Department of Justice - Sep 7th, 2023
- State’s Top Elections Official Interviewed By Jan. 6 Investigators - Anya van Wagtendonk - Jul 19th, 2023
- Op Ed: Kaul Should Charge Ron Johnson, 10 Fake Electors - Matt Rothschild - Jan 8th, 2023
- WisDems Chair Ben Wikler Statement on the Anniversary of 1/6 - Democratic Party of Wisconsin - Jan 6th, 2023
- Congresswoman Gwen Moore Statement on Two-Year Anniversary of January 6th - U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore - Jan 6th, 2023
- Wisconsin GOP Chair Expressed Concern About Fake Electors Plan, Then Joined In - Shawn Johnson - Dec 23rd, 2022
- Report Calls For Criminally Charging State’s Fake Electors - Henry Redman - Dec 19th, 2022
Read more about Chaos at the Capitol here
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Ron Johnson must always be remembered for not only enabling, but also misleading and encouraging for years, thoughts and actions leading up to the traitorous attack on our nation’s Capitol, plus whatever similar events may follow.
Ron Johnson probably made a good choice when he married into a plastics factory. Legend has it that he helped make that factory more successful. I worked in a plastics factory when I was a young man. It was a dirty business, RJ has done next to nothing but dirty business since he bought a seat in the U.S. Senate. His promoting Trump’s lies for years has led us to where we are now. RJ should resign.