They’ve Lied About this from the Very Beginning
Anyone who bases their judgment on facts knew they were lying from the start. In fact their entire strategy is based on massive lying. What am I talking about? Voting. Republicans figured out a long time ago that their demographic (old, white, angry) is shrinking. Historically, this is a relatively recent phenomenon, started when the GOP went nuts after Goldwater lost in ’64. Ultra conservative voices began rising during that time, really more Libertarian and Bircher, and when Reagan beat Carter, the calcification of the party really set in. From those days to today, the GOP has pushed the entire country farther and farther to the right, pushing everyone not white, not old, not nuts out of the tent. Trump’s takeover of the party has completed the calcification, adding white supremacy as just another adjective to describe the base.
The GOP base is so demographically narrow that it simply cannot fairly win anymore. As the country becomes more diverse, our population is moving away from the radicalism and obvious insanity that is now the party. So, how can they win on a national scale? It’s two pronged: by keeping the base continuously whipped up and raging about dark-skinned people, and, of course, by cheating. A lot.
That cheating comes in the form of radical gerrymandering and voter suppression. Gerrymandering is a fact of life and several cases have been consolidated at the SCOTUS, but, unless Roberts has a sudden fit of rationality, I don’t have much hope. Voter suppression, though, is just as insidious; keeping Americans from being represented in the Congress, the very basis of our republic. Voter ID laws have been pushed now for twenty years, based on the lie that there is massive voter fraud occurring during our elections (by dark skinned people) that simply doesn’t exist. Trump used that same blatant lie to explain away him losing the popular vote in 2016 by 3 million votes.
One of the Republicans pushing this lie is Chris Kobach, a white nationalist (who won’t admit it) and former Kansas Secretary of State. Kobach was behind faked voter fraud studies in Kansas, and pushed anti-Muslim policies as well as strict voter ID laws. After he lost the election for governor in 2017, he became an advisor to Trump, bringing his radical ideology to the WH. And it’s not good. In 2017 he lead Trump’s bogus voter integrity committee that quietly folded in 2018 after it couldn’t find one shred of evidence of massive voter fraud and being stopped by the states in amassing private data about voters.
One of the tactics Kobach pushed to Trump was adding a citizenship question to the US Census questionnaire. Sounds benign, right? Hardly. The question is specifically designed to scare people who may have members of the family who are not citizens, have a green card, or are undocumented. Why? To undercount these populations and disproportionally increase representation to the GOP base (old and white). Seats in state houses and in the US House are at stake. Trump and crew have been lying about the reason for adding this question from the very first moment. Their problem though, is that they’ve now been caught lying to Congress about it.
It turns out that Kobach pushed the citizenship question to the Trump campaign in 2016, long before Wilbur Ross claimed it was introduced in early 2017. Yesterday, Elijah Cummings, chair of the House Oversight and Reform committee, disclosed details of a closed door interview with Kobach last Monday where he revealed this new detail. Now we know why Trump has desperately been trying to expand executive privilege over even those who don’t actually work for him, but who just talked to him. That effort failed and the administration is caught now in yet another lie.
So, Kobach lied until last Monday. Wilbur Ross lied and stonewalled the House, likely earning a contempt of Congress vote just like Bill Barr did for refusing to testify. This episode is yet another page in the encyclopedia of lies told by this administration. Hopefully we can use this lie to shut down another of the GOP’s efforts to win by cheating.