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To: scion who wrote (12789)2/26/2021 6:56:00 AM
From: scion  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12881
 
Once the mainstream model, Michigan GOP embraces right wing

By THOMAS BEAUMONT and DAVID EGGERT
54 minutes ago
apnews.com

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Josh Venable, a longtime Michigan GOP operative and chief of staff to former U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, can trace the arc of the state’s Republican Party clearly.

“This was the state where to be Republican was defined by Gerald Ford and George Romney,” Venable said, referring to the moderate former president and former governor.


Now, he said, it’s defined by Mike Shirkey, the state Senate majority leader who was overheard calling the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot a “hoax”; Meshawn Maddock, the new co-chair of the state party who backed former President Donald Trump’s false claims of voter fraud; and the Proud Boys.

While the state has swung back to Democrats since Trump’s narrow 2016 win, choosing President Joe Biden by more than 150,000 votes, Michigan’s Republican Party has taken a hard right turn.

Its own Capitol in Lansing was the rallying point in April for armed Michigan Liberty Militia protesting pandemic restrictions, including some members who were later charged with plotting to kidnap Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

The rightward lurch has altered the GOP’s image to one unrecognizable to its pragmatic 20th century standard-bearers, and the direction of the state party here could be an exemplar of other Midwestern battleground states.

The move to more hard-line, extreme views in Michigan came into clearer view Wednesday when it became known that Trump devotees, no longer content with the GOP as their political home, had filed a petition with the state elections board to form a new Patriot Party.

Decades in the making, and punctuated loudly by Trump’s 2016 win, Michigan’s drift from the GOP’s center has prompted departures from traditional conservatives and retribution against moderates.

It’s ominous for a party that suffered defeat statewide in 2018 and 2020 and where some Republicans worry it has cost the party credibility in a place long viewed as a bulwark of Midwestern common sense.

The shift is rooted in a combination of economic dislocation caused by staggering job losses in the manufacturing sector and a cultural shift further to the right on issues like guns and abortion.

The state’s economy was suffering even before the Great Recession, which only fomented working class discontent.

From 2000 to 2010, Michigan had shed more than a million jobs, more than any state, most of them in manufacturing. Many were in the automotive industry in larger metro areas. But single-factory small towns to the north also were flattened, as the North American Free Trade Agreement and the globalization it represented sparked losses that ballooned with the 2008 economic crash.

“All these things were a catalyst,” said Ken Sikkema, a former Michigan GOP Senate leader whose Grand Rapids district lost 5,000 jobs with three plant closures just before the 2008 crash.

“This building resentment that people just didn’t agree economically or culturally with the direction percolated and exploded,” Sikkema said.

Traditional conservatives like Paul Mitchell and others were casualties. Mitchell, who retired from the U.S. House after two terms representing working-class eastern Michigan, later quit the GOP and assigned responsibility for the Jan. 6 riot to Trump, for whom he voted twice.

Michigan’s two Republican congressional moderates, Fred Upton and Peter Meijer, have been censured by county party committees for voting to impeach Trump.


On Tuesday, the GOP committee in Cass County, Upton’s home, sided with Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia over Upton, who voted with Democrats this month to strip Greene of her committee assignments for suggesting, among other debunked theories, that mass school shootings were false flags.

“In their resolution, they stated that ‘her comments have not been out of line with anyone else’s comments,’” Upton, a 34-year incumbent, posted on Twitter on Wednesday about the Cass County GOP. “Really?”


Meijer, elected last year, said the party will continue to lose supporters if they celebrate and encourage its hard-right elements.

“If we’re strictly a litmus test party, we’re going to drum out some of the people we need to be able to win competitive elections,” Meijer said.

Though the ascendance of the right in the party became starkly clear in the last year, there have been other signs of the direction Republicans were heading.

In 2012, outspoken social conservative state Rep. David Agema surprised party regulars by ousting longtime establishment Republican Saul Anuzis as national committeeman.

Former Gov. Rick Snyder, Gateway Inc.’s former CEO, fit the change theme of 2010, but his moves to tax pensions, expand Medicaid under the 2010 federal health care law and spend $617 million to bring Detroit out of bankruptcy drew a backlash.

Snyder, who campaigned against partisanship, all but ignored the political spadework of building the party as his predecessors had done. The resulting vacuum provided a stage for figures such as Maddock to seize.

“Forces of nature take over at that point, and those forces were definitely tilting right, extreme far-right,” said Venable, who was state Republican Party chief of staff in 2010.

The void ceded space to right-wing extremism and allowed a relationship with Republican leaders and Michigan’s long-active militia to develop.

Maddock was a Trump delegate to the 2016 national GOP convention but took on a more prominent role in 2020 with the national Women for Trump Committee.

She helped organize the April protest in Lansing, where militia brandished rifles in the Capitol, and she later posted images from the event of Whitmer altered to resemble Adolf Hitler.

Maddock also helped organized Michigan’s 19-bus delegation to Washington last month to protest the 2020 election results. Though Maddock spoke at the “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 5, she said she was absent from the deadly U.S. Capitol siege that followed Trump’s speech on Jan. 6.

Nodding to the emerging right wing, Michigan GOP fundraiser Ron Weiser invited Maddock to share the ticket for his bid to become state party chair. Weiser was elected chair, and Maddock his No. 2, on Feb. 5.

All the while, Michigan’s GOP leadership has for the first time in memory bestowed legitimacy on its state’s militia, long relegated to the shadows.

Weeks after the April demonstration in Lansing, Shirkey, the state Senate majority leader, accepted an invitation to meet with militia leaders after they sought him out for calling some of the Capitol protesters “jackasses.”

Days later, Shirkey pressed a crowd of militia in Grand Rapids to remain vigilant.


“We need you now more than ever to continue to train,” he told the group in Grand Rapids, urging them “to stand up and test that assertion of authority by government.”

The embrace of the militia reflects a jarring shift for these right-wing, paramilitary groups from the fringe to the center of the GOP power centers.

“These people had always been marginalized, but you’ve got leaders in the party enabling their behavior now,” said Mitchell, the retired former Republican congressman. “It’s a total pendulum swing.”

___

Beaumont reported from Des Moines, Iowa.

apnews.com



To: scion who wrote (12789)2/26/2021 7:51:49 AM
From: scion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12881
 
QAnon Believers Duped by Trump, Melania Impersonators on Telegram

WON’T STOP BELIEVIN’

Kicked off of most social media platforms, QAnon believers who flocked to Telegram found that some of MAGAworld’s biggest stars had joined them. Unfortunately, they were fakes.


Will Sommer
Politics Reporter
Updated Feb. 26, 2021 5:12AM ET / Published Feb. 26, 2021 4:46AM ET
thedailybeast.com

QAnon conspiracy theorists pushed off of major social media platforms in the aftermath of the U.S. Capitol riot have a new problem: falling for obvious impersonators of their right-wing heroes on the messaging app Telegram.

A months-long purge of QAnon believers on sites like YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter climaxed in the days following the Jan. 6 riot, with Twitter alone banning 70,000 QAnon-related accounts. QAnon believers’ attempts to organize elsewhere online hit another wall in January when Amazon pulled server support from conservative site Parler, taking the upstart social media network offline for a month.

Faced with few other options, QAnon believers and other Trump supporters opened accounts on Telegram, a social media network and messaging app that was already popular with conservative figures banned from more mainstream platforms.

Many of the Telegram newcomers found that some of MAGAworld’s biggest stars had joined them. Donald Trump himself was on the app, amassing more than 200,000 followers within a few days. So was Melania Trump, posting herself to Telegram as “Lady Melania Trump.” Air Force General John Hyten joined the app and began issuing cryptic, QAnon-style pronouncements that thrilled believers eager to see President Joe Biden arrested and Trump returned to power.

Except all of the accounts, including the accounts representing both Trumps and Hyten, were fake. Many of them were later removed, or marked as scams on the app. Despite that, QAnon believers soon started taking the fake accounts’ pronouncements as genuine, as though they really were coming from the Trumps or Hyten.

Attempts to convince QAnon believers not to follow have been inadvertently hindered by Lin Wood, the pro-Trump attorney whose legal attacks on the election results turned him into a MAGAworld star.

“Melania is a genius,” Wood posted on his genuine Telegram account on Jan. 18, linking his hundreds of thousands of Telegram followers to the fake Melania Trump Telegram account. “A beautiful genius. And she loves her husband and her son. They are geniuses too.”

Wood’s backing proved to be a powerful endorsement for some of the fake accounts. In QAnon chatrooms on Telegram, believers said they had been convinced the Melania Trump account was fake themselves—until they saw Wood post about it, persuading them that it was in fact real.


Wood, who has claimed the Georgia State Bar wants him to take a mental health evaluation to retain his membership, didn’t respond to a request for comment on whether he realized the Melania Trump account was fake.

Telegram didn’t respond to a request for comment about how it’s responding to the obvious impersonators. Telegram appears to have added scam warnings to at least some of the Trump-themed accounts — an account impersonating former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that has amassed more than 16,000 followers, for example, has a red “SCAM” warning attached to its profile page. The accounts impersonating Hyten and the Trumps, meanwhile, have been deleted.

Not every account, however, has been removed. The leading fake account belongs to a hoaxer impersonating Lt. Gen Tom McInerney, a retired Air Force general who has a post-military career as a conspiracy theorist through frequent appearances on Alex Jones’s InfoWars show.

McInerney, a leading proponent of the birther conspiracy theory about Barack Obama’s birthplace, is a powerful voice on the far right. Days after Trump’s election defeat, the real McInerney backed a conspiracy theory about nefarious computer programs named Hammer and Scorecard stealing the election. Thanks to McInerney’s credentials as a former general who ostensibly knows about high-level intelligence matters, the hoax exploded on the right, with many of its adherents citing McInerney’s endorsement as the only proof they needed.

On Telegram, the fake McInerney account has amassed more than 158,000 followers by playing off of the real McInerney’s reputation. McInerney himself disavowed the account in a January internet radio appearance, flatly saying it didn’t belong to him.

But that hasn’t stopped the account from growing increasingly popular. The remaining conspiracy theorists on Twitter, for example, cite the account’s claims as fact, or circulate screenshots of its Telegram messages as proof of a discredited hoax that Hillary Clinton was caught on tape terrorizing a child.

The account’s mysterious operator doesn’t appear to have an ulterior motive, aside from urging people to buy bitcoin and fire their liberal employees (“Terminate them immediately”). The McInerney account appears to be just another QAnon promoter using McInerney’s name to win more followers to the conspiracy theory. On Thursday, the account’s owner claimed that Trump’s upcoming speech Sunday at the Conservative Political Action Conference qualifies as a State of the Union address, meaning that Trump is still the president.


Still, the bogus accounts have proved to be more successful at attracting Telegram followers than genuine Trump allies on the platform.

The fake McInerney page has nearly 160,000 subscribers, with each post viewed more than 100,000 times. By comparison, former Trump adviser Roger Stone has less than 30,000 followers on his real Telegram page, while InfoWars figure Paul Joseph Watson has 43,000 followers. Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne, who met with Trump and his advisers in a heated meeting in the final days of the Trump administration and has since emerged as a leading election fraud conspiracy theorist, has 65,000 followers.

Better-known QAnon promoters who have now found their flocks swayed by even less credible voices have begged their followers not to follow the obviously fake accounts.

“Someone somewhere is trying to mind fuck us,” QAnon promoter Jordan Sather complained in a Telegram post.


thedailybeast.com