Traditionally, U.S. Senate candidates have gone to great lengths to appear responsible and mature, avoiding outlandish rhetoric that might make them look foolish. In contemporary Republican politics, things work a little differently: GOP Senate hopefuls running in competitive primaries often go out of their way to say ridiculous things, hoping to get some attention and impress the party’s far-right base.
With this in mind, Rep. Billy Long, running in a competitive Senate primary, has a strong incentive to make bizarre comments. Yesterday, for example, the GOP congressman unveiled what he described as his “platform” — which included having President Joe Biden making Donald Trump the vice president.
Why would this happen? Why would a Senate candidate include this in a “platform”? The answer doesn’t matter: Long’s idea was absurd for the sake of absurdity.
Around the same time, as HuffPost noted, the Missouri Republican shared some thoughts on mass shootings.
Rep. Billy Long (R-Mo.) was asked during an interview with Missouri radio station The Eagle 93.9 on Wednesday whether there was any appetite among Republicans in Congress to pursue changes to gun laws. It came in the wake of a gunman’s massacre of 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas. Long, who is running for the U.S. Senate, said guns aren’t the issue…. He said there are a few solutions but that the problem can be traced back to when abortion became legal nationwide.
“[S]omething has happened to our society,” Long said. “I go back to abortion, when we decided it was OK to murder kids in their mothers’ wombs. Life has no value to a lot of these folks.”
The comments generated a fair amount of attention, which was likely the point: Long will now tell Missouri primary voters, who are weighing their Senate options, that he caused a stir by connecting mass shootings to abortion without regard for reason or propriety.
In the process, the congressman added to his party’s unfortunate list of scapegoats intended to distract attention from guns.
Hopefully, some very patient person has compiled a comprehensive list of things Republicans have blamed for mass shootings, but off the top of my head, some of the more head-shaking contenders include the multitude of doors at schools, video games, and possibly even marijuana.
Sen. Ron Johnson blamed society’s “secularization,” and when that didn’t prove persuasive, the Wisconsin Republican lamented “teaching wokeness” and suggested critical race theory was partially responsible for the bloodshed.
At an NRA gathering last week, Sen. Ted Cruz turned his attention to absent fathers, declining church attendance, social media, and video games. The Texas Republican added that “good guys” with guns can stop “bad guys” with guns — despite the painfully obvious fact that what transpired in Uvalde left this tired talking point in tatters.









