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Republicans stop distancing themselves from violence-provoking seditionist Marjorie Taylor Greene

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There are a number of ways to rise to positions of prestige and power in the House Republican caucus. By far the most effective is to be a serial pedophile, but being a confirmed sex trafficker can also boost your credentials, and mounting an effectively belligerent defense of your history covering up the molestation of student athletes will get you put on every House committee the Republicans can sign you up for. Senate Republicans tend to gravitate toward those with grotesque records of domestic abuse or candidates who have a habit of holding a gun to their wife's head during arguments.

Anyone who had to suffer through the party's long insistence on being the stewards of all American morality has gone nauseous just thinking about it, but it's a trend. Want to rise in Republican politics? Commit crimes that would get anyone else thrown in a prison cell.

The Associated Press has taken notice of the new shift from top Republicans on party problem child Marjorie Taylor Greene. Greene's pro-coup, pro-sedition, pro-violence, racist, antisemitic, and other extremist statements resulted in a House vote stripping her from all committee assignments and rendering her something of a pariah when it comes to doing her alleged day job of being a congress-creature. Republicans, however, objected to the Democratic-led punishments from the beginning and have mostly tried to keep quiet about Greene and her anti-democratic frothing.

At one point, Greene was reduced to touring the country with close ally and sex trafficker Matt Gaetz, a financial catastrophe for both members. But House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy has led the push to redeem Greene and re-elevate her as a dominant voice in the party, promising he'll return her stripped committee assignments if Republicans take the House.

What's different now, then? Volume, mostly.

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The last week has seen Greene take a front-and-center seat (literally) as McCarthy unveiled the party's latest substance-free mini-pamphlet purporting to be a policy agenda, and has seen Republicans clam up even as Greene again elevated calls for violence by feverishly telling a Trump rally crowd that "Democrats want Republicans dead, and they've already started the killings."

Greene has become a prominent fixture in Trump's recent "Save America" rallies, trading her tour with sex trafficker Matt Gaetz for one that partners her with coup orchestrator Donald Trump. That tour has been a relentless assault of Republican racism, sedition-backing, and party-backed hoaxes. Trump and Kevin McCarthy have come to apparent agreement on who should represent the party as the midterms draw near, highlighting their most extreme members to screech out the party id and rile conspiracy-addled crowds.

Greene isn't moderating her conspiracy rhetoric. A day after Republican Tommy Tuberville told a crowd of Nevada Trump-backers that Black Americans "want reparations" because "they think the people that do the crime are owed that!", Greene followed up at the next rally with longtime white nationalist conspiracies targeting immigrants.

Echoing the "great replacement" theories of neo-Nazi groups, Greene claimed that "illegal aliens are on the verge of replacing you, your jobs, and your kids in school. Coming from all over the world, they’re also replacing your culture."

There is a pattern to these Republican claims, and it is a familiar one in fascist and white supremacist circles. This is rhetoric meant to justify extermination.

Red flag: Greene is a dangerous propagandist setting the stage for violence. Authoritarians have always preached survivalist ideologies to make people feel violence is necessary. Read #Strongmen for case studies around the world of the tragic outcomes of such demagoguery. https://t.co/wtpFWqINOu

— Ruth Ben-Ghiat (@ruthbenghiat) October 10, 2022


Greene's earlier claims that Democrats had "already started the killings" of Republicans, Tuberville's assertions that Black Americans "do the crime," and Greene's claim that "illegal aliens" are "on the verge of replacing you" are all conspiracies aimed at rallying the listening crowd to support urgent, extreme action against the targets as supposed means of self-defense. It is a consistent way to provoke violence against the named targets, as was demonstrated by terrorists in El Paso, New Zealand, and elsewhere.

White conservatives are not merely being asked to share power with hated enemies; those enemies are engaged in a campaign to exterminate them. In the face of that danger, a democracy-ending coup is seen as not just rational but patriotic. In the face of that danger, the rule of law is taken as an intolerable restraint.

In the same speech, Greene again issued demands to impeach Joe Biden, who the Republican crowd believes is not the "legitimate" president; Merrick Garland, the attorney general who has oversight of Justice Department investigations into Trump's theft of national security documents and his provocation of violent coup; and Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, presumably for not taking an extremist stance against refugees. The conspiracy hoaxes peddled by Greene, Trump, and others are intended to justify violence and lawbreaking in order to protect the right of the nationalist right to commit violence and break laws. Retaliation against those who refuse to bend the law to their whim is high on the agenda.

The days of Greene being shunned for peddling violence-provoking hoaxes and actual acts of sedition are over, if any such days existed. McCarthy has been dogged in backing anyone who will back his own political ambitions, regardless of their scandals, even as Republican allies sabotage other extremists who have not.

McCarthy may have been genuinely terrified as he called Trump to beg for help during the Jan. 6 coup attempt, but slid into the seditionists' corner the moment the immediate danger had passed. The party's leadership is now promoting both Greene and the only American president in history to attempt a genuine coup. It is a fascist party. Redemption isn't coming.

So much is on the line this election, and we need to make sure every eligible voter is able to cast their ballots. Sign up to volunteer for Election Protection to fight voter suppression and rampant disinformation. From field work to remote work you can do at home, there is something for every volunteer with Election Protection.

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Yes, the polls still matter! On The Downballot, The Economist's G. Elliott Morris joins us to discuss his new book on polling, Strength in Numbers, including the early history of polling in the form of 19th-century straw polls; how we can be smart consumers of polls by placing their uncertainty in context; and the surprises that have stood out in his new model forecasting the 2022 midterms.

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