Thom Hartmann has checked out the record and public statements of the new Speaker of the House of Representatives, Representative Mike Johnson of Louisiana. He is even more of an extremist than his idol Donald Trump.
Hartmann writes:
The election of Louisiana’s Mike Johnson as House Speaker proves the premise that all the GOP has left are Donald Trump and hate.
As Congressman Jamie Raskin told reporters yesterday:
“Donald Trump has cemented his control over the Republican conference in the House of Representatives. He has a stranglehold on the Republican Party. Even as he faces 91 criminal charges and several of his election lawyers have pleaded guilty now to election-related offenses, one of his enablers on January 6 has just become the speaker of the House Representatives.”
Johnson’s hate of Democrats is so deep that he led a Trump-backed effort in the House to get Republicans to back a lawsuit by 18 Republican state attorneys general to overturn Biden’s election as president.
Their lawsuit had no merit and no facts — everybody, including the Republicans involved, knew that Biden had won fair-and-square — but Republican hate of Democrats is now so deep that the idea of Democrats legitimately governing after winning an election is repugnant to them. No matter how big the Democrats’ victory (7 million votes in this case) may be.
Johnson went public with his support of Trump’s hateful, poisonous Big Lie just a week after the 2020 election, saying:
“You know the allegations about these voting machines, some of them being rigged with this software by Dominion, there’s a lot of merit to that…They know that in Georgia it really was rigged.”
As The Washington Post noted at the time:
“Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.), head of the conservative Republican Study Committee, spearheaded the effort to round up support on Capitol Hill. Johnson emailed all House Republicans on Wednesday to solicit signatures for the long-shot Texas case after Trump called. The congressman told his colleagues that the president ‘will be anxiously awaiting the final list to review.’”
Johnson got 106 of the 196 Republicans then in the House to sign on to the effort to force four swing states to throw out Democratic votes and declare Trump emperor for life: he was the legal architect of the argument. It doesn’t get more hateful against our republican form of government than that effort to destroy confidence in the vote at the cornerstone of our democracy.
Johnson’s hate of women having agency over their own bodies and lives is so intense that he has repeatedly championed a nationwide ban on abortion.
His wife Kelly, a “licensed pastoral counselor” with whom he’s in a “covenant marriage,” makes money from Louisiana Right To Life, and before being elected to the House in 2016 he was an attorney for the far-right-billionaire-supported Alliance Defending Freedom that pushed the Dobbs case before the Supreme Court.
While there, he helped sue New York and New Jersey to force them to allow official state license plates that displayed an anti-woman, anti-abortion message; sued New Orleans to try to block benefits for the partners of queer city employees; and promoted a “National Day of Truth” to encourage homophobic students to hate on their LGBTQ+ peers.
Johnson and the GOP explicitly hate queer people and their allies.
“Radical homosexual advocacy groups” are promoting “the culture’s assault on traditional values,” Johnson wrote in an op-ed for a Louisiana newspaper. That “assault,” of course, was gay marriage, something that horrifies Johnson and his wife.
He wrote:
“Same-sex ‘marriage’ selfishly and deliberately deprives children of either a mother or a father. Children need both. Homosexual relationships are inherently unnatural and, the studies clearly show, are ultimately harmful and costly for everyone.
“Society cannot give its stamp of approval to such a dangerous lifestyle. If we change marriage for this tiny, modern minority, we will have to do it for every deviant group. Polygamists, polyamorists, pedophiles, and others will be next in line to claim equal protection. They already are. There will be no legal basis to deny a bisexual the right to marry a partner of each sex, or a person to marry his pet.”
Johnson also supports a federal version of DeSantis’ “Don’t Say Gay” law that would outlaw any discussion of queer people in any public school classroom in America. In another anti-gay newspaper screed, Johnson wrote:
“Your race, creed and sex are what you are, while homosexuality and cross-dressing are things you do. This is a free country, but we don’t give special protections for every person’s bizarre choices. Where would it end? This is one Pandora’s box we shouldn’t open.”
While Johnson hates queer people, he apparently loves Vladimir Putin, an affection that has earned him the loyalty and help of Donald Trump.
Last month he joined Matt Gaetz and 93 other Republicans in voting to cut off all US military aid to assist Ukraine’s survival in the face of Russia’s ongoing terror campaign.
He’s also a friend to mass shooters and the psychopaths at the NRA.
Johnson repeatedly voted against gun safety and gun control legislation, and voted against re-authorizing the Violence Against Women Act.
Hating on Medicare and Social Security is another specialty of Johnson and the GOP. As Social Security Works Executive Director Alex Lawson noted yesterday:
“Rep. Mike Johnson has a long history of hostility towards Social Security and Medicare. As Chair of the Republican Study Committee from 2019-2021, Johnson released budgets that included $2 trillion in cuts to Medicare and $750 billion in cuts to Social Security, including:
— Raising the retirement age
— Decimating middle class benefits
— Making annual cost-of-living increases smaller
— Moving towards privatization of Social Security and Medicare.”
Johnson also pushed for $3 trillion in cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), saying slashing the entitlement programs should be Congress’ “top priority.” Johnson is also a huge advocate for a Catfood Commission to figure out ways to slash Social Security benefits to seniors (thus forcing them to eat catfood: the White House refers to it as a “death panel for Social Security”).
Like Red state Republican politicians beholden to the tobacco, alcohol, and pharmaceutical industries, Johnson also hates marijuana. He’s repeatedly argued and voted against legalization, as well as helping shoot down a bill that would let legal pot dispensaries use banks to conduct their business.
Hating on science and our children’s future is a feature, not a bug, of Republican politics, and Mike Johnson fits right in. The largest single group of donors to his political career have been the oil and gas industries, and he happily takes their money and spreads their lies. For example, he argued:
“The climate is changing, but the question is, is it being caused by natural cycles over the span of the Earth’s history? Or is it changing because we drive SUVs? I don’t believe in the latter. I don’t think that’s the primary driver.”
The League of Conservation Voters gave his environmental record a 0 percent (yes, zero) score for 2022: this guy has burrowed so deeply in Big Oil’s pocket that he’s like a blood-filled tick on a shaggy dog. He’ll never let go.
On voting rights, Johnson hates voters in Blue cities in Red states as much as their own Republican legislatures do. A big fan of voter suppression laws, he argued that making it harder to vote and purging people from voter rolls would help the GOP in the 2022 election:
“They’re making sure that the election results can be counted upon, and that’s a critical thing for us to do.”
That was followed by his voting against the John Lewis Voting Rights Act and the For The People Act, both of which would have guaranteed Americans’ right to vote regardless of race, religion, or geography. On the other hand, he voted for a Republican bill that would have enshrined GOP voter suppression efforts nationwide.
Like Rand Paul and Tommy Tuberville, Johnson apparently also hates our men and women serving in the armed forces.
He voted against the Honoring our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Actthat President Biden was cheerleading because it would aid service members like Biden’s son Beau who became deathly sick because of exposure to open-air burn pits and other toxins.
He also voted against a year-end package of bills to aid service members, including requiring states to honor the professional licenses of military spouses who find themselves stationed in states other than where they were originally certified. And he joined Tuberville in his opposition to the Pentagon paying to fly raped servicewomen stationed in countries or states where abortion is illegal to places where it is available.
Johnson has supported a few Republican military spending bills, but only, as military.comnoted, when they are “packed with GOP policy riders such as provisions to bar abortion services, transgender health care, and LGBTQ+ Pride flags at the VA.”
Johnson, like most Republicans who hate the idea of Brown people entering our country legally, is also a “border hawk,” having visited our southern border with Donald Trump and introduced two pieces of legislation that would restrict immigration and refugee status. Speaking of his desire to “build a wall” and keep would-be refugees out of the US, he said:
“Now, I have no illusions about this. I’m sure that President Biden will veto anything we send him, but it will send a very strong message. If we can’t override a veto, we’ll be ready to run when the next Republican president is elected two years later.”
Republicans like Johnson love to plaster the word “freedom” all over everything they do. But they’re just fine with a for-profit prison industry lobbying for harsher sentences, and to keeping draconian drug laws in place.
When Republicans say “freedom,” it’s a safe bet they mean they want the freedom to hate on minorities, the freedom of rich people and giant corporations to screw average working people, and the freedom of billionaires to continue paying only around 3 percent of their income in income taxes.
In MAGA Mike Johnson (what Trump calls him), Republicans have found the perfect embodiment of their deplorable basket of hatreds. At this point, the only “loves” they have are rightwing billionaires and the fossil fuel industry. And, of course, Trump’s good buddy and fossil fuel oligarch Vladimir Putin.
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Mike Johnson is exactly the type of person Traitor Trump wanted as his puppet Speaker of the House. The chaos that may tear the country apart is what the traitor wants.
Two heartbeats away from being president, Johnson is in a position to turn the US government upside down, throw it under a tank, roll over that a dozen times, blend what’s left into mush, and then flush that into a toxic septic tank that is then blown up.
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I said that the Dems should’ve kept McCarthy in the job. I was the only person i know to say so. These events have sadly proved i was correct, at least I think so.
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Mike Johnson’s “friendships” are recorded in a post at his site, “This Baker’s Supreme Court case could set tone of religious liberty in U.S.”
Evangelicals and Catholics are about equal in number in Louisiana.
In the post, Johnson builds inferences of commonality with the USCCB, the Colorado Catholic Conference (btw- the executive director is formerly from the Koch network and EdChoice), the Catholic Medical Association and, other Catholic organizations.
Johnson concludes his post, “In an apostolic exhortation on the proclamation of the Gospel, Pope Francis recently insisted that religion (shouldn’t) be relegated to the inner sanctum of personal life…(should include) concerns about the soundness of civil institutions…”
I agree there are reasons to fear the public policies advanced by protestant evangelicals like Mike Johnson. However, his sect doesn’t own 1 in 6 US hospitals. If a baker can deny his/her services to a gay couple, can doctors in the Catholic Medical Association deny care to those they believe are not living the lives consistent with the doctors’ religious beliefs?
Off topic but related to Louisiana, from the Guardian, “New Orleans Archbishop: Local Catholic institutions (including schools) must help
with cost of clergy abuse claims” (9-9-2023).
So, is this one takeaway, after Amy Barrett’s friend and Manhattan Institute Fellow, Notre Dame Prof. Nicole Stelle Garnet, achieves her goal of religious charter schools, paying for whatever churches do, becomes the citizens’ tax burden?
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“There will be no legal basis to deny. . . a person to marry his pet.”
I wonder just how many people want to marry his/her/its pet?
Over/under in the US? 10?
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I sent screen shots of this article to my far R brother. I didn’t realize that believing in law and order was something I didn’t like. [OH YES, I love chaos.] I wonder what wonderful things the far R media is saying about Mike Johnson.
Here is is reply:
He’s a Christian, something you leftist hate! That’s what you get for reading and listening to left wing propaganda. He also believes in law and order, something the left doesn’t want. Your people love chaos. Don’t send me any of your propaganda or anything else you think is news worthy or I’ll start sending Bible verses again.
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Carol,
I’m sorry for you. Don’t waste your time.
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Your brother has deep-seated issues. Condolences.
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Will he drive the nation into fiscal default and try and hold Biden as the hostage? We find out in a few short weeks.
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As are everyone of the Republicans who voted for him.
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I always enjoy Thom Hartmann, even when I disagree with him.
One thing he left out (likely because there is just so much awful there) is Mike Johnson’s love of David Barton. For those unfamiliar with Barton, he is an evangelical self-styled “historian” who wrote an amazingly mendacious book about Thomas Jefferson that tried to rewrite history, and Jefferson himself.
Warren Throckmorton, a professor at the evangelical Grove City College, a Christian school, was astonished at the amount of flat out lies Barton told in his book. Throckmorton and Michael Coulton responded with the book Getting Jefferson Right, which so destroyed Barton’s revisionism that Barton’s publisher withdrew his book from the market.
Barton and his ilk, like Johnson, are Christian theocrats. They want nothing less than the destruction of the Constitution and the establishment of a Christian government in the United States. Anyone not a Christian would be a second- (or third-, or fourth-) class citizen, if they are allowed to be citizens at all.
In short, we would become a theocracy, joining only Iran with such a distinction. And it would be a bloodthirsty theocracy indeed. They must be stopped.
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I saw a clip of a Mike Johnson interview on Twitter this morning. https://x.com/ronfilipkowski/status/1717718043525099743?s=46&t=9ko2QEoKmRIlvHb1PdtjSw
He responded to a question about what he believes: “Read the Bible. It’s the source of everything I believe.” That defines him as a fundamentalist. No reference to the Constitution.
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Funny how he doesn’t mention WHICH bible.
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Harvard Law Professor Adrian Vermuele who is described as the nation’s most dangerous critic of liberalism, calls for preference for Catholics in immigration policy.
For those who have forgotten, there is not one evangelical protestant on SCOTUS. And, neither Leonard Leo nor the past and present managing partners of Jones Day are evangelical protestants. The legal scholar given credit as most influential in advancing religious charter schools is not evangelical protestant.
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The Catholics play a very different game. Different ballpark.
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Please elaborate.
The article at Akron Beacon Journal (12-14-1999), “Whose choice, How school choice began in Ohio,” corroborates your point. And, the efforts of the Catholic Conferences also corroborate.
Media’s positioning of Hillsdale as protestant Christian, as though it is similar to Liberty University shows the power of Catholic PR.
As a side note, Praeger U provides a history of school choice that includes Marquette University’s Father Virgil Blum.
Cara Fitzpatrick also includes him in her history, naming two others who were of similar importance to the school choice campaign, Milton Friedman and James Kilpatrick, a staunch segregationist.
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The SPLC informs readers at its site that David Barton advised Newt Gingrich and Sam Brownback.
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Barton’s a menace. And a coward.
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Ruth Marcus at The Post, on Mike Johnson:
“Before being elected to Congress, he was a senior lawyer and national spokesman for the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative group that opposes abortion, same-sex marriage and LGBTQ+ rights…Running for Congress in 2016, he described himself as ‘a Christian, a husband, a father, a lifelong conservative, constitutional law attorney and a small business owner in that order, and I think that order is important.’ Johnson said he had been ‘called to legal ministry and I’ve been out on the front lines of the ‘culture war’ defending religious freedom, the sanctity of human life, and biblical values, including the defense of traditional marriage, and other ideals like these when they’ve been under assault.’ ”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/10/25/dangerous-mike-johnson-house-speaker/
Susan Glasser, at the New Yorker, on Johnson:
“In the hours after Johnson’s unexpected ascension on Wednesday, the press and the political commentariat feasted on examples of the previously little-known congressman’s ideological extremism: his calling gay people ‘dangerous’ and ‘deviant’ threats to the American way of life; his sponsorship of a national abortion ban and warning that those who performed an abortion would, at least in Louisiana, end up doing hard labor; his insistence that, if only women would bear more ‘able-bodied workers,’ there would be no need to cut back Medicare and Social Security. His climate-change denialism, his belief in creationism over evolution, and his promotion of ‘covenant marriage’ were all examined. It was pointed out that Johnson, after only six years in Congress, was the least experienced Speaker in a hundred and forty years, and the most hard-right House leader anyone could remember.”
https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-bidens-washington/speaker-who-the-rise-of-a-gop-nobody-in-trumps-house
As Glasser concludes, about Republicans in the House, but now basically true of all Republicans, “They are all Trumpists now.”
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Johnson’s wife, Kelly, is a real peach too.
The Huffington Post reported that the “operating agreement” for Onward Christian Counseling Services, which she owns and runs, says this:
“We believe and the Bible teaches that any form of sexual immorality, such as adultery, fornication, homosexuality, bisexual conduct, bestiality, incest, pornography or any attempt to change one’s sex, or disagreement with one’s biological sex, is sinful and offensive to God.”
And, for individual counseling, the emphasis is this:
“God has provided us the answers for every burden and challenge of life.”
The answers are, naturally, all in the Bible, as Mike Johnson just told Sean Hannity. Johnson also said, after the Maine massacre, that this is “no time” to talk about gun laws, like, perhaps, a possible re-legislating of the assault weapons ban.
So, if this is not the time, then when is it? And, what DOES the Bible say about mass murders? What does it say about Israel and Palestine? What does it say about the dinosaurs, or Australopithecus, or Home Erectus? What do Mike and Kelly think the Bible says about poverty, and how to remedy it? What do they think it says about the science behind evolution? plate tectonics? genetics? climate change? racism? misogyny? “liberty and justice for all?”
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The god of the Old Testament was a mass murderer extraordinaire. He murdered by the thousands, often for rather trivial reasons.
A lot of Christians are fine with that.
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Johnson is not just a bigot, he is a dedicated crusader for bigotry. What a revolting person. And so freaking ignorant and backward.
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