It underscored a dangerous development: the era of post-truth politics.
Two years later, the phenomenon hasn’t gone away. In Arkansas
last week, Tom Cotton (r), his cabal’s nominee, was
caught in one of the most brazen lies
of the 2014 campaign season. The right-wing congressman claimed he
voted against this year’s Farm Bill because President Obama “hijacked”
it, “turned it into a food-stamp bill,” and added “billions more in
spending.”
As a factual matter, literally none of this is even remotely true, and fact-checkers came down hard on such shameless dishonesty – all of which might matter if Cotton gave a darn. But as Peter Urban reported the other day, the repugican just doesn’t care about getting caught.
Rejecting criticism of its latest TV ad, repugican Tom Cotton plans to keep running the “Farm Bill” message beyond its current ad buy.“We’ve gotten such great feedback from farmers, taxpayers, and supporters that we’re actually going to increase the size of the ad buy,” said David Ray, a spokes-liar for the Cotton campaign.
In a local interview this week, Cotton said he’s “proud” of
his demonstrably dishonest commercial, adding that the fact-checkers
didn’t spend time “growing up on a farm,” so he knows “a little bill
more about farming than they do.”
As defenses go, Cotton’s argument is gibberish. One need not
grow up on a farm to recognize the basic tenets of reality. The
congressman told a lie, he knew it was a lie, he got caught telling a
lie, and instead of doing the honorable thing, Cotton has decided he likes this lie.
The public discourse isn’t supposed to work this way. Under
traditional American norms, politicians could be expected to spin,
dodge, and slice the truth awfully thin, but there was an expectation
that a candidate who got caught telling a bald-faced lie to the public
was likely to end up in real trouble.
Cotton seems to believe those norms no longer apply – he can get caught lying and pay no real price at all.
In other words, Tom Cotton sees American politics in a
post-truth era. He can say what he pleases, without regard for honesty,
because there won’t be any meaningful consequences for deceiving the
public on purpose.
Is he right? This didn’t work out too well for Romney, but Cotton’s in a much better position to prevail in Arkansas.
Once the standard is set that lying will be rewarded, what incentive will politicians have to be honest?
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