Like clockwork, Republicans have revived their anti-immigrant fearmongering ahead of the midterm elections, with many focusing on what they allege is a porous border that serves as a corridor for crime.
Think of it as a re-up of the “caravan” rhetoric from 2018, a bigoted ruse to rile Americans’ racist fears about predominantly-Latino migrants entering the United States through its southern border with Mexico.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., is doing his part to keep the anxiety high by telling spooky — and completely unsubstantiated — stories about Americans’ encounters with drugs he claims are coming through the southern border virtually unfettered. In the past week alone, McCarthy has appeared on Fox News at least twice telling tales of Americans who’ve suffered debilitating health issues merely by coming in contact with fentanyl, the powerful drug additive connected to a raft of overdoses across the country in recent years.
The problem here is that claims that people can suffer overdoses or serious health defects merely by coming in contact with fentanyl have been debunked time and again. Typically, we find police departments telling these fentanyl-related lies, but McCarthy has gotten in on the act in recent interviews with some of Fox News’ most vocal opponents of immigration.
On Sunday, he appeared on Fox News host Maria Bartiromo’s show pushing baseless claims that a junior high school counselor overdosed after touching a dose of fentanyl a student allegedly brought to school.
It was a tale so fictitious it belongs in a “Law & Order” episode.
The minority leader’s remark appears to be a referring to a story related to drugs in California, but as the progressive watchdog Media Matters noted, “there is no valid basis to Rep. McCarthy’s claim”:
Local news reports do not mention the Bakersfield, CA, junior high counselor overdosing; First Responders administered NarCan after the potential exposure, in line with the DEA’s first responder guidance: “Incidental skin contact may occur during daily activities but is not expected to lead to harmful effects if the contaminated skin is promptly washed off with water.”
But McCarthy isn’t one to let the truth get in the way of a good story. And just days later, he was back on Fox News — this time with right-wing host Laura Ingraham — pushing the same fentanyl myth.
Kevin McCarthy is still lying about people overdosing on fentanyl by merely touching a pill pic.twitter.com/ZfqT7NKXjK








