Numerous GOP candidates for Senate are not only campaigning on Trump's big lie. They're also going out of their way to emphasize invented vote fraud *in urban centers.*
Adam Laxalt, who's running for Senate in Nevada, is attacking the integrity of the voting in counties with big cities (Las Vegas, Reno) while explicitly claiming the voting in GOP areas is "legitimate":
The RNC censure of Cheney and Kinzinger claims the 1/6 committee is engaged in the “persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”
It has become party dogma that the 1/6ers are martyrs and heroes:
Trump's ugly admissions of guilt over 1/6 are clarifying. Because he's flaunting his corrupt designs, opposing reform of the Electoral Count Act is now firmly aligned with making a 2024 coup easier.
Simply unreal: A GOP bill in New Hampshire targets "negative" depictions of US history. Its explicit goal: To ensure teachers retain "loyalty" and don't push "subversive doctrines."
This McCarthyite effort could be a model for more to come.
The absurdly vague language of these bills is a feature, not a bug. The idea is to make teachers feel as if they're perpetually on thin ice, treating them like subversive elements that must be rooted out at the slightest deviation from orthodoxy:
Under the New Hampshire bill, it would be reasonable for teachers to think they must tread carefully when saying positive things about certain abolitionist or civil rights tracts: