Ron Johnson wants you to know that he is a victim.
The cancel culture and left-wing media are trying to silence him, he said this week in a series of appearances on national television, in talk radio interviews and on the floor of the U.S. Senate. He also said so in multiple newspaper interviews and in an op-ed piece in one of the nation’s most-read newspapers, The Wall Street Journal, where he boldly declared: “I Won’t Be Silenced by the Left.”
The latest attempt to silence him, he says, is the criticism that he has received for his racist comments about the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
In a radio interview this week, the senior senator from Wisconsin described some of the very fine people who rallied on Jan. 6 as “people that love this country, that truly respect law enforcement, would never do anything to break the law.” So, he told host Joe Pags, he wasn’t worried when they converged on the Capitol to block the counting of electoral votes.
“Now, had the tables been turned — now, Joe, this will get me in trouble — had the tables been turned and President Trump won the election and those were tens of thousands of Black Lives Matter and antifa protesters, I might have been a little concerned,” Johnson said.
This was, he now insists, absolutely, positively not racist. “I completely did not anticipate that anybody could interpret what I said as racist,” Johnson said on a local talk radio show. “It’s not. This is about rioters.”
Striking a Trumpian note, he complained that reporters “are willing to lie, twist, distort, omit, censor and cancel anything or anyone with an opposing view.”
But Johnson’s real problem isn’t that he has been censored. In fact, as noted, Johnson is a ubiquitous presence on national television, and the voluble senator’s words have been reported at great length.
Indeed, his penchant for conspiracy theories has become so pronounced that it has earned him the sobriquet RonAnon, a fitting nickname for a senator who has trafficking in everything from Obamagate to Hunter Biden’s laptop to lies about fraud in the election and vaccine skepticism.
A quick confession: I go way back with Johnson, so his evolution from maverick legislator to performative crank has been difficult to watch.
Johnson’s problem isn’t that he’s being shut down — it’s that he won’t shut up.
Until Republicans lost control of the Senate, he was the chairman of its Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, a position that gave him oversight over pretty much anything he wanted to focus on. Instead, he chose to obsess over a bizarre stew of Trumpist delusions.
In 2018, he charged that an informant had told his committee that a “secret society” was set up within the FBI and the Justice Department shortly after Donald Trump was elected president. Johnson claimed that it constituted “corruption at the highest levels of the FBI.” (He later backed off the claim.)
While denouncing what he called the “Russian collusion hoax,” he demanded the declassification of a memo from former national security adviser Susan Rice that Trump World imagined was at the center of “Obamagate.” (It turned out to be a dud.)
Throughout 2020, he also downplayed the dangers of Covid-19. “Right now,” he said in March, “all people are hearing about are the deaths. I’m sure the deaths are horrific, but the flip side of this is the vast majority of people who get coronavirus do survive.”
In August, as the death toll passed 157,000, Johnson said the pandemic isn’t “that much worse” than the flu and accused the media of peddling what he called “panic porn.”








