Brian Beutler Profile picture
Jun 29, 2021 29 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Not to pick on this one piece, but it’s a good example of how Republican bad faith has become the background assumption in so much journalism, rather than a set of behaviors that can and should be questioned. Image
Like, Republicans could simply not try to do a coverup for partisan gain!
Here again the fact that Republicans are operating in bad faith is presented as a feature of the landscape, not political conduct in its own right. Image
It would be straightforward to present this same set of facts in the scandalous light it deserves—the GOP angling to cover up the truth about the insurrection. Instead, Republican bad acting is accepted as a given, and the story reduced to “will it work though?”
Republicans seeking a pretext to sabotage negotiations everyone anticipated they would sabotage is just how things work, as far as much of the mainstream press is concerned. Not dishonest conduct that deserves direct scrutiny. Image
Another instance of GOP bad faith basically rewiring journo brains. Of course Biden didn’t cause the chip shortage. They just anticipate Republicans will pretend it’s his fault anyhow and frame it as a challenge for him, not as a story about the dishonesty of his opponents. Image
Baking the presumption of GOP bad faith into everything, rather than treating it as a series of choices by human agents, creates a kind of impunity (through exhaustion or savviness or whatever else) where it isn’t even worth pressing them on their conduct.
The bad-faith GOP strategy of threatening to tank the economy while Dems are in charge, based on pretexts Republicans plainly don’t believe, and even though the Dems don’t engage in the same kind of nihilism, is just presumed and unexamined (and, of course a problem for Dems). ImageImage
Isn’t the problem here that they’re threatening to sabotage the economy based on lies? Seems worse, idk,
Republican bad faith (in naming pro-insurrection members to sabotage the committee) is just a feature of the landscape; Pelosi intervening to prevent the sabotage is a move by an actor with agency, and subject to scrutiny.
Every reporter understands what happened when you interrogate it:

Why did McCarthy pick Jordan and Banks? To turn the committee into a circus, to protect the party and Trump.

Why did Pelosi reject Jordan and Banks? To prevent that from happening.

Nobody is confused about it.
But the first half of the equation must be presumed, an unalterable feature of the landscape. Otherwise reporters must confront thorny questions like: why do Republicans keep showing contempt for honesty, consistency, truth, fair play, etc?
Having baked in the bad faith—Of COURSE McCarthy appointed saboteurs, how could it ever be otherwise? Of COURSE he’s looking for an excuse to back out, pretend investigating insurrection is partisan!—the only person whose decisions become worth a closer look is Pelosi.
All reporters know this; they just can’t make themselves treat Republican conduct as a series of decisions that merit scrutiny.
They all know Cheney’s on the committee, that Republicans killed the bipartisan commission and that their attacks on the committee’s findings are pretextual. They can’t make that the basis of their reporting because it’d mean placing GOP bad-faith dealing under scrutiny.
Again, they know Cheney is on the committee, that McCarthy picked Jordan and Banks to sabotage it, and Pelosi nixed them to prevent said sabotage. They’d rather print disinformation—‘bipartisan probe falls apart’—than treat GOP conduct as a series of choices to be questioned.
The headline could be Republicans Withdraw From Insurrection Committee; Bipartisan Investigation Will Proceed With Democrats, Cheney

But that’d require tackling questions like “why are Republicans behaving in this way?” rather than treating their dirty dealing as a constant.
It’s wild because one of the most incredible stories in U.S. history is right there for the plucking—an organized mob of the president’s supporters attacked the Capitol and his party is trying to cover up the connections between the two.
But when you internalize and accept that party’s corruption—what else would you expect them to do?—it stops seeming like a scandal and frees you from having to confront how aberrant the behavior is.
If I were feeling churlish I’d note that this is why you don’t strive for bipartisanship as a goal in and of itself; it gives bad actors the power to make you fail on your own terms. But nah, this is a media failure first and foremost.
Reminder for the “gift to McCarthy” and “bipartisanship failed” crowds: Not only were these things widely known yesterday, they literally just happened! It’s not like you forgot. ImageImage
So let’s try again, why did McCarthy appoint Banks and Jordan to the committee?
When GOP bad acting merits little more than a passing nod, the question of what to do about it melts away and all that’s left to do is second guess the deftness of the people stuck in its orbit; in this case Pelosi.
GOP voters are gonna believe what they’re gonna believe. The point isn’t to conduct the investigation *just so* in the vain hope that they open their minds. It’s to get to the unvarnished truth. Can’t do that with Jordan and Banks on the committee anymore than with Trump himself.

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More from @brianbeutler

Sep 23
New: Trump is in the midst of a desperate play to turn out young male voters. Here's why I think it won't work for him in the short run OR the GOP in the long run. 🧵 Image
First, speaking as a recently young man, we don't tend to have our shit together. Women turn out at higher rates than men and oldsters at higher rates than youth. Trump might ask Dems how much success they've had mobilizing the youth with policy pandering. offmessage.net/p/trump-pander…
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Second, the pandering itself is super ham-fisted. It's marked as much by grift as by political potential. Is he really interested in the future of crypto? Or is he scamming supporters to enrich himself with both crypto AND silver commemorative coins AND... offmessage.net/p/trump-pander…
Read 5 tweets
Jun 11
Recent reporting suggests Biden world understands that his abysmal approval is rooted in a rotten info environment more than material reality. That’s the good news. The bad news is they’ve developed a defeatist mentality, instead of trying more things. offmessage.net/p/joe-biden-im…
The short version is Biden turned the page on Trump too quickly, allowing Trump to revise the history of his presidency AND pin blame for everything post-Jan 20, 2021 on Biden. Three-plus years later, that’s not an easy problem to fix without time travel. offmessage.net/p/joe-biden-im…
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But I think there’s a way: conceptualize the universe of people who might be persuaded that the CW about the economy is wrong, and speak to them in a different register than Dems typically use. offmessage.net/p/joe-biden-im…

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Read 4 tweets
Jun 10
New: Republicans hope to intimidate Democrats out of abandoning their advantages with aggressive posturing, but they’re really just leading with their chins. offmessage.net/p/republicans-…
The bad news: this has clearly worked on some Dems (cf @PaulBegala). The good news is, once you spot the con, it’s easy to detect in later instances. h/t @joshtpm offmessage.net/p/republicans-…
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When @EWErickson and @JDVance1 insist they’re mad about Joe Biden campaigning on democracy and attacking Trump’s contempt for veterans, it’s not because they think Biden did anything wrong. It’s because they know Biden hit his target. offmessage.net/p/republicans-…
Read 4 tweets
May 31
1. @GregTSargent is obviously right that “A guilty verdict is powerful new information,” and that, “We should hold institutional Democrats responsible if they don’t use it, and use it ruthlessly and effectively.” newrepublic.com/article/182111…
2. But I think we’ve already reached that point.
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3. Call it the eruption of a political supervolcano! Devastating, shameful, humiliating news for the GOP, which has lashed itself to a felon—the biggest crook in US political history by a mile. What’ll make this a nothingburger is Democrats’ apparent determination to make it one.
Read 4 tweets
May 29
New today: Business leaders cozying back up to Trump don’t just offer up laughable excuses. They also evince terrible critical thinking skills. The logic is there, it just reflects poor logical reasoning and reckless risk tolerance. offmessage.net/p/why-are-thes…

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One thing people like Stephen Schwarzman might consider is: What would’ve happened if Trump’s coup attempt had been even just a bit more successful: No certification on Jan 6, a scramble to transfer power after January 20, more street violence. offmessage.net/p/why-are-thes…
But even stipulating that a second Trump term will be relatively “normal”—no crises or coups, just familiar erraticism and partial success implementing his agenda—why do any of these guys think they’ll be better off than just continuing the Biden era? offmessage.net/p/why-are-thes…

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Read 4 tweets
May 22
As it happens, before Durbin’s most recent preemptive surrender this week, I wrote about specific ways he *could* use his power now. To wit: unearth Alito’s unlogged votes and unstated reasoning wherever the Court has done quiet favors for Trump. offmessage.net/p/expose-the-s…
Biden, who has also been inert here, could do his part by lifting his embargo on exploiting Trump’s criminal exposure, making it easier for Senate Dems to hold Alito, Thomas, Cannon, et al accountable. offmessage.net/p/lacking-camp…
Then on Politix, we discussed the institutional asymmetries between Dems and Republicans that makes it necessary to apply pressure in this way, where Republicans would just know to react aggressively. politix.fm/p/big-alito-li…
Read 4 tweets

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