A month after President Joe Biden won the 2020 election, Republican Sen. Ron Johnson appeared on CNBC and said, “There’s this feeling that this election was stolen, that it’s not fair, that there’s all kinds of fraud.” Two days before the insurrectionist attack on the Capitol, the Wisconsin senator added that there are 70 million Americans with “real legitimate suspicions that this election was stolen.”
At face value, Johnson’s rhetoric was bonkers but predictable: The GOP lawmaker is a far-right ally of Donald Trump and a man who eagerly embraces odd conspiracy theories. It surprised no one when Johnson helped fuel his party’s anti-election Big Lie.
Indeed, as Republican state legislators in Wisconsin moved forward with plans for a taxpayer-financed “investigation” into election irregularities that don’t exist, Johnson endorsed the effort.
With this in mind, it came as a bit of a surprise when the senator acknowledged reality when he apparently didn’t know he was being recorded. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported:
As Wisconsin Republicans in recent days widened a review of the presidential election, U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson told a woman the only reason Donald Trump lost the state was because he didn’t perform as well as other GOP candidates on the ballot. The Oshkosh Republican made the comment to a liberal activist who posed as a conservative at a Republican event held Sunday. She posted a video of their exchange on Twitter on Tuesday.
“There’s nothing obviously skewed about the results,” the senator conceded. Noting the results from other Wisconsin races, Johnson added, “If all the Republicans voted for Trump the way they voted for the Assembly candidates, he would have won. He didn’t get 51,000 votes that other Republicans got, and that’s why he lost.”
As a factual matter, that’s true. But as a political matter, Trump and his allies remain wedded to the idea that the former president did not, in fact, “lose,” reality notwithstanding.








