Over the weekend, Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) sat down with ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos and peddled some deeply unfortunate election nonsense, including discredited claims that he’s seen boxes of Georgia ballots “coming out from underneath the table.”
But as part of the same interview, the Indiana Republican added that “half of the country” feels “uncertain about what just happened” in the 2020 presidential election.
Braun didn’t seem to appreciate the disconnect: he was simultaneously misleading the public about the election and marveling at the percentage of Americans who lack confidence in the election results.
This came to mind yesterday, as Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), after indulging his anti-science instincts during a pandemic, announced plans for a hearing next week on election “irregularities.” The far-right Republican argued in a press release:
“I am mindful that many of the issues that have been raised have been, and will continue to be, appropriately resolved in the courts. But the fact remains that a large percentage of the American public does not view the 2020 election result as legitimate because of apparent irregularities that have not been fully examined.”
To the extent that reality matters, there are no “apparent irregularities.” Donald Trump, his lawyers, and his allies have had more than a month to produce any kind of evidence to substantiate these claims, and they’ve failed spectacularly, both in the courts and in the public discourse.
But more to the point, note that Johnson feels justified in pursuing the matter because so much of the public questions the legitimacy of the election results.
What we’re left with is an example of mendacious partisans eating their own tail:
1. Republican officials launch an aggressive effort to undermine public confidence in their own country’s electoral system.









