To do
otherwise would hide the nature of the candidates, misrepresent the facts to
voters and fail to fulfill the journalistic obligation to take the side of
truth. An election teeming with militant liars should not be covered as an
ordinary contest between two parties. This is no time for coverage based on
false equivalence and whataboutism if we are to survive as a democracy with
credible elections.
How to cover election deniers? Try calling them election liars.
Columnist|
August 22, 2022 at 10:30 a.m. EDT
A fleet
of Republican candidates are running on a fundamental lie that strikes at the
heart of our democracy — and on an implicit promise of future insurrection. The
common term is “election deniers,” but that underplays the menace they pose.
For
starters, we should keep in mind that they are not only lying about the 2020
election, repeating the thoroughly debunked falsehood that President Biden was
not legitimately elected. In no other era would a national party have nominated
such crackpots to any office, let alone governor or U.S. Senate.
But the
worrisome trends don’t stop there. Doug Mastriano, the Republican nominee for
governor in Pennsylvania, has been linked to a rabidly antisemitic social media
site known to have provided an “online home for the man charged
with killing 11 worshipers at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue.”
(While condemning antisemitism,
he has refused to disavow the site, to which his campaign paid $5,000 for “consulting
services.”) In April, he spoke at a conference organized
by Alan and Francine Fosdick, who have promoted QAnon conspiracy theorists,
that “included the screening of a video claiming that the country is
experiencing a ‘great awakening’ that will expose ‘ritual child sacrifice’ and
a ‘global satanic blood cult.’ ”
Kari Lake, Republican
nominee for governor in Arizona, has endorsed a candidate for Oklahoma state
Senate who “produced such a stream of internet bile he can only be seen as a
committed anti-Semite, homophobe and racist — one of the most vile people in
political life, unfit for government and unwelcome in polite society,” as one
Arizona Republic column put it.
Republican
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan has called the
GOP nominee to succeed him, Dan Cox, a “QAnon whack job,” “a nut” and “not, in
my opinion, mentally stable.”
Republicans’
reprehensible and radical views (including climate denial, xenophobia and
advocacy for forced birth, with no exceptions
from abortion bans, even for a 14-year-old rape victim) should be enough
to disqualify them from office. But beyond all that, these and other GOP
Senate, House, gubernatorial, secretary of state and attorney general candidates
are running on the lie that set off the violent insurrection at the Capitol.
The GOP
nominee for secretary of state in Arizona, state Rep. Mark Finchem, for
example, “introduced a resolution to decertify 2020 election
results in the state,” NPR reported. “Finchem — a longtime member of the Oath
Keepers, a far-right extremist group — was at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021,
and in an interview with NPR earlier this year he declined to call what
happened there a riot or an insurrection.” Several members of the Oath Keepers
have pleaded guilty and/or
been convicted of crimes
for their Jan. 6 actions.
Incumbent
Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) is running against election liar Republican Blake
Masters. Kelly had this exchange Sunday
with CNN’s Jake Tapper:
TAPPER: I
want to ask you about your Republican opponent in the upcoming Arizona Senate
election.
He says
Democrats want to — quote — “change the demographics of the country.” He has
openly embraced Donald Trump’s election lies. He has the support of a lot of
openly racist notorious individuals.
Your —
the Arizona Republican nominee for governor says that President Biden isn’t a
legitimate president. He — she says she wants her Democratic opponent in jail.
The Republican nominee for secretary of state in Arizona, he’s a
self-proclaimed member of the Oath Keepers. . . . What’s happened to the
Arizona Republican Party?
KELLY:
Well, unfortunately, I think right now that the folks you mentioned have some
really dangerous ideas, and they’re not consistent with most -- most Arizonans,
even most Republicans in Arizona.
So I’m hoping we can move
away from that. My Republican colleagues that I talk to in the United States
Senate, I mean, these are good, good people, by and large, who are working
really hard. And they don’t need those dangerous ideas in the United States
Senate.
Jim
Marchant, Republicans’ nominee for secretary of state in Nevada, says
that he would not have certified President
Biden’s Nevada win (a victory that had a margin of more
than 33,500 votes). Michigan’s GOP nominee for secretary of
state is arguably crazier. As the Atlantic reports:
Kristina
Karamo, a community-college professor who’d previously accused Democrats of
having a “satanic agenda,” went on Fox News again and again to describe how
illegal ballots supposedly had been tallied for Joe Biden at the TCF Center in
Detroit, where she worked as a poll watcher. She testified before the State
Senate that sacks of votes inexplicably had been dropped off there in the
middle of election night. She suggested that Dominion Voting software had
flipped Trump votes to Biden votes statewide.
None of what Karamo
described actually happened—as far as anyone has been able to confirm.
It is
grossly insufficient to call these characters “election skeptics” or even
“election deniers.” Their candidacies are based on the “big lie” (supported by
fabulist tales and fraudulent claims). Their views are well beyond what was the
mainstream in American politics before the MAGA movement came along.
Rep.
Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who describes “large portions" of
the GOP as “very sick,” vowed on ABC’s “This Week” to campaign against election
liars. “I’m going to work to support their opponents. I think it matters that
much.” If lifelong conservative Republican Cheney is apparently willing to
campaign for Democrats, this is no ordinary midterm election. The mainstream
media should adjust accordingly.
The
mainstream media cannot pretend that these Republicans are ordinary candidates
in ordinary races. The language to describe them should be as blunt as Cheney’s
— liar, insurrectionist, antidemocratic, radical, etc. They should be
introduced and labeled that way when they appear on interview shows or in print
and online pieces. And their lies should be debunked within headlines and lead
paragraphs (“Election liar Lake says...,” etc.).
To do
otherwise would hide the nature of the candidates, misrepresent the facts to
voters and fail to fulfill the journalistic obligation to take the side of
truth. An election teeming with militant liars should not be covered as an
ordinary contest between two parties. This is no time for coverage based on
false equivalence and whataboutism if we are to survive as a democracy with
credible elections.