It was a mistake to talk about the Massie thing at all.
He's a congressional backbencher from the outer suburbs of Kentucky.
Anyone who didn't receive the Christmas card shouldn't care.
There seem to be two possibilities.
1. This was a Christmas message to his supporters. In this case, other people shouldn't imply it was meant for them.
2. He's trying to troll the liberal media. In this case, we should ignore him and not give him what he wants.
But now that this got covered, Boebert realized it's a way to get attention, and any discussion of this gives her what she wants.
I'm curious about how Crenshaw is drifting from the party. What policy positions does he take that are too centrist?
I know we keep ignoring comments about stolen elections, but the evidence for that claim sucks. As time goes by we get more evidence against it.
For example, a conservative law firm released their report about the 2020 election in Wisconsin (the state that tipped the electoral college to Biden.)
https://madison.com/wsj/news/local/g...64d1afd06.html
Their conclusion is that Trump lied on January 6, and it was immoral.
They did have some concerns, but they conclude that the election results were not anomalous.“The purpose of the report is not to say that the outcome of the 2020 election is wrong,” WILL president and general counsel Rick Esenberg said. The report says it was “shameful” and “embarrassing” for Trump to call on Congress to at least delay counting electoral votes and for some of his supporters to breach the Capitol on Jan. 6, although the report disputes that it was “a serious ‘insurrection.’”
- The election’s results were not “anomalous,” meaning, for example, voting patterns aligned with long-term state and national trends of Democrats winning more in the cities and suburbs and Republicans winning more in rural areas.
- A review of roughly 20,000 ballots from 30 wards, including some in Madison, found “a significant number of voters who voted for Biden and a Republican for Congress, while far fewer voters split the other way. This is consistent with the explanation that a key driver of Trump’s loss was a segment of traditional Republican voters choosing not to support him.”