Nikki Haley recently appeared on Fox News to argue against holding Donald Trump accountable for inciting the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Though the former ambassador to the United Nations was willing to say the former president’s actions were “not great,” Haley soon added, “I mean, give the man a break. I mean, move on.”
Around the same time, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) also appeared on Fox News and used similar phrasing. “[T]o coin a phrase, I think it’s time to move on,” the Republican senator said. “It’s time to move on.”
Most Republicans in D.C. have adopted the same posture: the attack was a whole month ago, and Trump’s no longer in office, so why make a fuss about the former president attacking our democracy, trying to subvert our electoral process, and dispatching a violent mob on the Capitol?
But away from Capitol Hill, it’s a different story. At the state level, Republicans aren’t just resisting the idea that the political world should “move on”; they’re still acting on the ridiculous idea that Trump’s Big Lie is true.
In Nevada, for example, the state Republican Party is urging the public to call into state legislative meetings featuring Barbara Cegavske — Nevada’s Republican secretary of state, to ask why “no official is investigating illegal votes in Nevada.”
In Michigan, it’s worse.









