Sunday, October 30, 2022

Glenn Youngkin Reveals His Nastiness and Extremism

During his gubernatorial campaign Glenn Youngkin played many suburban voters fools and pretended he was a business-minded moderate.  Since taking office he has  shown that his campaign was a cynical lie and he has been fully onboard with some of the ugliest elements of today's GOP.  Personally, I recognized his lies early on - seeing he was the darling of The Family Foundation, one of Virginia's foulest far right hate groups was a dead give away for me - but far to many fell for Youngkin's disingenuous act. One of his first acts in office was to signal that he will oppose any honest discussion of history and racism and he is fully onboard with the larger GOP effort to erase LGBT students and citizens from any mention in public schools.  Meanwhile, using the claim of supporting "election integrity" he's in favor of disenfranchising minorities.  Also notably, under Youngkin Virginia lost its rating as the best state in which to do business.  Given his pandering to the extremists within the GOP, progressive business may increasingly think twice about coming to Virginia. Having seen him speak at a falsely labeled pro-LGBT event, the man is slick with a crowd which makes him all the more dangerous.  A column in the Washington Post by a columnist who mistakenly initially gave Youngkin the benefit of thinking he had integrity shows a rethinking of who Youngkin is that I hope more and more Virginians are experiencing.  Here are column highlights:

I’d like to take this opportunity to retract the nice things I said about Glenn Youngkin a few months ago.

In July, I wrote a column when reports began to surface that Virginia’s Republican governor, a fresh and sunny political newcomer with proven bipartisan appeal, was already thinking about running for president.

At the time, I expressed hope that Youngkin — or someone like him — would seek the GOP nomination in 2024. His stunning 2021 victory in blue-ish Virginia showed that there might still be room in the Republican Party for a different model of politician, one who could run as a unifying alternative to Donald Trump’s venomous brand.

Optimist that I am, I still hope that a tribune of sanity will emerge in the Republican Party. But the everydad in the fleece vest probably isn’t that guy. When a situation this week called for expressing a modicum of human decency, Youngkin — who frequently talks about his religious values — showed he could rival the former president at diving for the gutter.

As news was breaking Friday about the horrific attack on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul, by an intruder in their San Francisco home, Youngkin happened to be campaigning in Stafford, Va., for Yesli Vega, the Republican running in a very tight race against Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger.

“Speaker Pelosi’s husband, they had a break-in last night in their house, and he was assaulted. There’s no room for violence anywhere,” Youngkin said.

Alas, he didn’t stop there.

“But we’re going to send her back to be with him in California,” the governor said. As the crowd cheered, Youngkin doubled down: “That’s what we’re going to go do. That’s what we’re going to go do.”

Set aside the fact that his joke, if that’s what you can call it, showed a lack of understanding of basic civics and geography. Pelosi is in Washington because she has been elected for the past 35 years by the voters of California. This has nothing to do with anybody in Virginia.

What made Youngkin’s riff not only tasteless but also dangerous is that he was not referring to some random act of “violence anywhere.” The attack on Paul Pelosi was a direct product of the toxic political culture — a culture that the governor was helping to cultivate for what he apparently sees as a political opportunity.

Evidence now indicates that the assailant who beat Pelosi with a hammer, sending the 82-year-old to the hospital with a skull fracture and serious injuries to his arm and hands, had broken into the Pelosi home because he was looking for the speaker herself. Nancy Pelosi has been demonized for years by Republicans, including in countless GOP campaign ads.

Being a jerk about Pelosi is not the only Youngkin action of late that betrays who he really is and what he is willing to do in service of his ambition. During his campaign for governor, he managed a tricky balancing act on the election denialism that has gripped his party. He promised to put “election integrity” at the top of his priorities in office — indulging the lie that fraud is rampant — but also acknowledged Joe Biden’s 2020 victory . . .

But more recently, Youngkin is being seen with the worst people in his party. A little over a week ago, he stumped in Arizona for GOP gubernatorial nominee Kari Lake, one of the loudest of those 2020 deniers and someone who has refused to say whether she will accept the results of this year’s election. He called her “awesome,” and she declared him a “total rock star.” . . . . Youngkin thinks it’s fine to undermine democracy in the cause of lower taxes and school choice.

[T]he commonwealth limits its governors to one consecutive term, which means, come 2024, he will be looking for a new job. Youngkin may still have some room for redemption, though it is shrinking. He could start by apologizing for his crude joke. So far, all we’ve heard is a statement from his office condemning the violence against the speaker’s husband and saying the governor “wishes him a full recovery and is keeping the Pelosi family in his prayers.” Meanwhile, his turn toward full-bore Trumpism is likely to be for naught. There are plenty of others, including the original, who do it better — and at less cost to their own integrity.


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