Rep. Madison Cawthorn’s remarks about “sexual perversion” and drug use in Washington have drawn the ire of fellow Republicans. Some appear to believe the North Carolina conservative was accusing his own party members.
Cawthorn, during an interview with a far-right podcast last month, alleged “people he looked up to” in Washington had invited him to attend orgies and did cocaine in front of him.
And you can tell from the reactions which party feels most targeted by his remarks. Democrats — knowing it seems unlikely Cawthorn was referring to them — have been having a lot of fun with his allegations.
Raskin: I concede our party is not for the kind of cocaine fueled orgies that a freshman Republican representative bragged about but we do understand that their marijuana prohibition laws don’t work for our people pic.twitter.com/zmisr7V5St
— Acyn (@Acyn) April 1, 2022
Republicans aren’t enjoying the episode as much.
Michele Woodhouse, a former Cawthorn supporter who is now challenging him in next month’s primary, questioned whether the orgy/cocaine allegations were a “publicity stunt” and called his recent behavior “irresponsible.”
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., on Thursday endorsed another Republican primary candidate, saying Cawthorn had “fallen well short of the most basic standard western North Carolina expects from their representatives.”
Tillis’ rare opposition to an incumbent within his own party came just days after House Republicans expressed anger over Cawthorn’s remarks in a closed-door meeting on Tuesday. On Wednesday, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy met with Cawthorn and Republican leadership to discuss his comments.








