Here’s one thing to watch for during the Super Bowl on Sunday (if you watch at all): Will Republicans double down on their hypocrisy about wanting to keep sports and politics separate?
In recent years, conservatives raised the volume of their whining over professional athletes and sports leagues that acknowledge social inequality. This, conservatives claimed, broke an unwritten rule that sports and politics cannot intermingle.
Never mind the fact that their gripes largely stem from actions taken by teams and players in the National Football League, an organization known for invoking ostensibly pro-American symbols that toe — if not outright cross — the line between patriotism and propaganda.
Last year, a few Republicans leaned in to the right’s hypocrisy about wanting to keep politics out of sports by purchasing campaign ads for the Super Bowl, ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.
Looking at the candidates’ results, the ads don’t appear to have helped much. As Politico noted last year, three political aspirants took to the airwaves — at the time, during their primary campaigns — including a couple ads geared toward a fanatical, right-wing base.
In Arizona, Republican U.S. Senate hopeful Jim Lamon, who ultimately lost his primary to Blake Masters, aired an ad depicting him in a Western shootout with characters meant to depict three top Democrats: President Joe Biden, Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly and then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.








