In hindsight, a Washington Post article last month detailing the Arizona GOP’s ability to raise money off of former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election lies was instructive. It showed how the state’s Republicans have mastered the most shameless grift in politics — and that grift is in full effect today.
Let’s call it the fascism industrial complex: a system of monetizing or otherwise benefiting from conservative voters’ illiberal impulses by attempting to undermine democratic elections and stoking violence by playing up fears of a culture war on conservatives.
The Post report explained how the Arizona GOP, led by Kelli Ward, raised money throughout 2021 by hyping election lies and, fundamentally, an audit it baselessly suggested was needed to prove Trump had actually won Arizona the previous year.
According to The Post:
Arizona Republican officials discovered that raising money off the audit was a smashing success. From May to September 2021, at least 92 emails mentioned the audit as a reason to give to the Arizona GOP. The state party secured almost $1.1 million during that five-month period of a non-election year, compared to about $865,000 for 2020 and 2022 combined.
It seems we’re seeing the same plan in action today: right-wingers’ using Arizona’s elections as a springboard for their conspiracy-based politics and using conservative voters as a piggy bank.
The Arizona Republic reported Tuesday that far-right state Sen. Wendy Rogers has already begun fundraising for “a new election for Maricopa” County. (That will not happen.)
I continue to believe the most shameless grift in politics today is that of Turning Point USA — a Phoenix-based group for young, Trump-loving Christian nationalists — and its founder, Charlie Kirk.
As I’ve written here previously, Kirk and co. were thoroughly rebuked this election cycle. Young people overwhelmingly backed Democrats over Republicans in key races, and, more specifically, many of the candidates Turning Point endorsed came up short. (Looking at you, John Gibbs.)
This face-plant comes at a bad time for the organization, which has scheduled its second annual “AmericaFest” convention for December.
It’s helpful information as you watch Kirk and other members of his organization constantly trying to gin up right-wing fervor over Arizona’s election results, in which several candidates Trump endorsed for key statewide offices took losses. Turning Point is now in the unenviable position of having to fill up a Phoenix convention center with rabid right-wingers barely a month after the group’s proof of concept as a youth outreach group was, well, essentially disproven.








