Ask Republican leaders on Capitol Hill about this year’s midterm elections, and they’ll likely answer by talking about the present and the future. Ask GOP candidates trying to break through in competitive primary campaigns the same question, and you’ll probably hear answers about the recent past.
In Arizona’s U.S. Senate primary, for example, Republican Jim Lamon recently aired an ad in which he insisted that politicians “rig our elections,” while showing an image of President Joe Biden. Around the same time, in Ohio’s U.S. Senate primary, Republican Bernie Moreno — who used to know better — also launched a commercial in which he told voters, “President Trump says the election was stolen, and he’s right.”
They’re not alone in peddling ridiculous election-related lies. Consider the case of Rep. Billy Long.
The winner of Missouri’s Republican U.S. Senate primary will be in a strong position to win the powerful seat, which in turn has created a crowded field of candidates. Hoping to break through, Long launched an ad about a week ago, claiming that Donald Trump “made America great, but the Democrats rigged the election.”
The congressman added that he’s running in part to “stop the Democrats from stealing another election.”
It’s possible, of course, that Long realizes that such claims are obviously untrue, but he’s peddling lies in the hopes of currying favor with the GOP’s far-right base. It’s also possible that the congressman has convinced himself that these nonsensical claims are true.
Either way, Long’s ad suggests that he sees obvious election-related falsehoods as a way to advance his ambitions. There are, however, some problems standing in the way.
Putting aside the corrosive effects these lies have on our democracy, there are also companies like YouTube that have policies against promoting such lies. In fact, YouTube this week pulled the congressman’s ad, explaining that the company’s “elections misinformation” policy includes a prohibition on “content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of select past national elections.”








