By Dana Milbank
An honest man visited the House of lies this week. He did not like what he found there.
âInsane.â âAbsurd.â âLudicrous.â Those are the actual words FBI Director Christopher Wray used to describe House Republicansâ crackpot conspiracy theories.
âThe American people fully understand,â Rep. Harriet Hageman (R-Wyo.) informed Wray at Wednesdayâs hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, â⌠that you have personally worked to weaponize the FBI against conservatives.â
Right. Hageman, the election denier who ousted Liz Cheney in a primary, would have you believe that Wray â senior political appointee in the George W. Bush Justice Department, clerk to a noted conservative judge, contributor to the Federalist Society, Donald Trump-appointed head of the FBI â is part of a conspiracy to persecute conservatives. âThe idea that Iâm biased against conservatives seems somewhat insane to me, given my own personal background,â he replied.
Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.), a close ally of Speaker Kevin McCarthy (Calif.), told Wray that his FBI âsuppressed conservative-leaning free speechâ on topics such as the unconfirmed theory that covid-19 resulted from a lab leak in China.
âThe idea that the FBI would somehow be involved in suppressing references to the lab-leak theory is somewhat absurd,â Wray answered, pointing a finger, âwhen you consider the fact that the FBI was the only â the only â agency in the entire intelligence community to reach the assessment that it was more likely than not that that was the explanation for the pandemic.â
And several Republicans on the panel floated the slander that the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection was an inside job perpetrated by the FBI.
âThis notion that somehow the violence at the Capitol on January 6 was part of some operation by FBI sources and agents is ludicrous,â Wray responded, âand is a disservice to our brave, hard-working, dedicated men and women.â
Good for him. But hereâs whatâs especially insane, absurd and ludicrous: No matter how many refutations Wray and others provide, Republicans are convincing people to believe their lies â and they are proud of the deception.
Johnson, the leadoff questioner at Wednesdayâs hearing, told Wray about a recent NBC News poll, in which âonly 37 percent of registered voters now view the FBI positively,â down from 52 percent in 2018. âThatâs a serious decline in the peopleâs faith, and itâs on your watch,â he told Wray.
Several other Republicans joined Johnson in gloating about the FBIâs poor standing in public opinion. âWeâre seeing the polling numbers,â said Rep. Barry Moore (Ala.). âThe FBI is tanking.â
Rep. Matt Gaetz (Fla.) taunted: âPeople trusted the FBI more when J. Edgar Hoover was running the place.â
Reps. Wesley Hunt and Nathaniel Moran, both from Texas, also needled Wray about the FBIâs popularity. âYouâre not aware of those numbers?â Moran jeered.
The Republicans are well aware of âthose numbersâ â because they are the ones who assassinated the reputation of the nationâs premier law enforcement agency. Support for the FBI isnât low among all Americans; itâs at rock bottom among Republicans â only 17 percent of whom had a positive view of the FBI in the NBC poll, compared to 58 percent of Democrats.
Now why would that have happened? Well, maybe itâs because theyâve been fed an endless diet of lies and conspiracy theories about the FBI by elected Republicans and their Murdoch mouthpieces. These lies â and similar ones told about the Justice Department, public health agencies, the IRS and even the military â serve Republicansâ short-term interest of discrediting the Biden administration. But the lies are also destroying the rightâs support for the most basic functions of government that even conservatives long supported, such as law and order and national defense. Maybe thatâs the goal.
Now, the arsonists are admiring the ashes.
When Wray walked into the House Judiciary hearing room this week, he entered a parallel universe. Awaiting him in the audience were three women wearing T-shirts saying âAshli Babbitt, Murdered by Capitol Police.â A few seats down, next to the woman with the âBidenâs Laptop Mattersâ phone cover, Ivan Raiklin, a self-styled âDeep State Marauder,â rose to heckle Wray: âSir, can you stop violating our First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments?â Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) ordered a recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance, which ended in the women in the Ashli Babbitt T-shirts shouting âjustice for all!â
Jordan opened with an ode to paranoia: âAmerican speech is censored. Parents are called terrorists. Catholics are called radicals. And I havenât even talked about the spying that took place of a presidential campaign or the raiding of a former presidentâs home.â
Gaetz accused Wray of âprotecting the Bidens,â of being âblissfully ignorant as to the Biden shakedown regime,â of âwhitewashing the conduct of corrupt peopleâ and of operating a âcreepy personal snoop machineâ at the FBI.
âAmen!â called out one of the Ashli Babbitt women when Gaetz finished.
Rep. Victoria Spartz (R-Ind.) accused Wray of a passel of crimes: âunlawful surveillance of American citizens, intimidation of American citizens ⌠potential coverups of convenient political figures and potential set ups of inconvenient political figures.â
They invoked the âRussian collusion hoaxâ and the Steele dossier. Most sinister were the attempts to pin the Jan. 6 insurrection on the FBI.
Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Tex.) invoked the conspiracy theory, popular on the far right, that a man named Ray Epps was an undercover FBI agent who instigated the violence on Jan. 6, 2021, in order to discredit Trump. (Epps filed a defamation lawsuit on Wednesday against Fox News for promoting the âfantastical story.â)
âShame on you!â Nehls said to Wray. Nehls called the Jan. 6 investigation a âpolitical witch hunt against greatest president in my lifetime.â Coming to the defense of people convicted for their actions during the insurrection, he claimed the FBI âis more concerned about searching for and arresting grandma and grandpa for entering the Capitol building that day than pursuing the sick individuals in our society who prey on our children.â
Before the hearing, the Associated Pressâs Farnoush Amiri reported that Republicans planned to screen a video showing the âFBI planting the pipe bombs outside the DNC on Jan. 6.â Rep. Tom Massie (R-Ky.) did screen the video, but he stopped short of fingering the FBI, suggesting only that there was some unspecified conspiracy involving law enforcement. (Massie, no legal scholar, at one point told Wray his behavior âmay be lawful, but itâs not constitutional.â)
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) announced that he was âgoing to make the assumptionâ that there were âmore than 10â FBI informants in the crowd on Jan. 6, 2021. Wray had said no such thing.
Patiently, Wray tried to disabuse the Republicans of their fantasies. No, the FBI doesnât investigate parents for attending school board meetings. No, there were not undercover FBI agents in the crowd on Jan. 6. Actually, the FBI has opened more investigations into violence by abortion rights supporters than by abortion opponents.
But each time Wray batted down a wacky accusation, Republicans popped up with another.
Rep. Chip Roy (Tex.) spoke of a âtyrannical FBI storming the home of an American family.â
Rep. Dan Bishop (N.C.) accused the FBI of being the âagent of a foreign power.â
Rep. Tom Tiffany (R-Wis.) alleged that the FBI âinterfered with the elections in both 2016 and 2020â and that Wray was in âdenialâ to say otherwise.
And Hageman saw Wrayâs FBI doing the âdirty workâ of âmass censorshipâ to âsuppress the First Amendmentâ as part of a supposed âtwo-tiered justice system that has been weaponized to persecute people.â
It was, to coin a phrase, an âabsurdâ spectacle to watch this law-and-order conservative being attacked by MAGA lawmakers set on undermining the rule of law. Various House Republicans had already issued demands to âdefund the FBIâ (Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia even sold T-shirts with the slogan), and on the day before the Wray hearing, Jordan, the Judiciary chairman, sent a letter to House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Kay Granger (Tex.) requesting that she âeliminate any funding for the FBI that is not absolutely essential.â (For good measure, Jordan also asked her to block some funds for the ATF.)
Were Republicans to succeed, Wray told the Judiciary Committee, they would leave Americans more vulnerable to fentanyl cartels, violent criminals, gangs, sex predators, foreign and domestic terrorists, cyberattacks, and Chinese spies. This is where a government of lies will take us.
The pandemic, thank God, is in the past. But covid disinformation continues to spread unchecked in the House of Representatives.
No one knows for sure how the novel coronavirus came to be. Among the U.S. intelligence community, five agencies believe it emerged from animals, while two (Wrayâs FBI, later joined by the Energy Department) think it leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China. Scientists tend to favor the animal-origin theory, but here, too, opinion is split.
Then, in a reality all their own, there are the Republicans on the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. They have embraced the lab-leak theory as gospel. Some of them even claim it was a Chinese bioweapon, an idea resoundingly rejected by science. And they accuse U.S. public health officials of an elaborate conspiracy â involving coverups and bribery â to suppress these âfacts.â
As Iâve noted before, there ainât no cure for long covidiocy.
The select subcommittee held a hearing this week, âInvestigating the Proximal Origin of a Cover Up,â to prove their conspiracy theory. They hauled in two scientists (on whose work the National Institutes of Health relied) to accuse them of being involved in a coverup because they argued (and still argue) that the animal-origin theory is probable.
âWe as a committee have formed what we feel is most important in understanding all the information thatâs brought forward to us, and that information points directly to a lab leak,â Rep. John Joyce (R-Pa.), a dermatologist, told the virologists.
Greene, whose technical expertise is in Jewish space lasers, suggested that the virus was a Chinese bioweapon and falsely declared that âthe [intelligence community] believes that the origin of covid-19 is from the lab. Most of the intelligence community believes that.â She accused the virologists of using âpro-China talking pointsâ and told them âitâs more important to really recognize that it probably came from the lab.â
Next came Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Tex.), who as Trumpâs White House physician was known as the âcandymanâ for his liberal dispensing of pills. He advised the virologists that their animal-origin theory was âridiculousâ and that it âsounds like engineeringâ was responsible for creating the virus â engineering funded by the NIH. âWhat a lot of people think is going on here is that Dr. Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins realized that theyâd been implicated in the production or in the creation of this virus, and they were doing everything they could, including getting both of you to come on board as tools or vehicles, to undermine that theory.â
Rep. Richard McCormick (R-Ga.), too, blamed human engineering, saying âwe can stop gain-of-function research when we admit that thatâs where the disease came from.â And the panelâs chairman, Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), proposed that âscientific integrity was disregarded in favor of political expediency, maybe to conceal or diminish the governmentâs relationship with the Wuhan Institute of Virology.â
Like Wray before the Judiciary Committee, the two scientists, Kristian Andersen of Scripps Research and Robert Garry of Tulane University School of Medicine, tried to rebut the wild allegations: âThe scientific evidence for this pointing to a single market in the middle of Wuhan is overwhelming.â The grant with which they were allegedly bribed was awarded before the pandemic. The virus on which gain-of-function research was conducted âcould not have led toâ covid-19. Their own initial suspicion that the virus came from a lab was âunsupportedâ by the scientific process. Fauci and Collins had no role in the witnessesâ conclusions.
But once again, the evidence hasnât stopped the conspiracy mongers from convincing the public. A Quinnipiac University poll in March found that 64 percent of voters â and a whopping 87 percent of Republican voters â believe the virus came from a lab leak.
Turn down any corridor in this House of lies, open up any door, and youâre likely to find a new conspiracy theory under development, a new fabrication taking shape.
Take the House Oversight Committee. This week, it emerged that Gal Luft, star âwhistleblowerâ behind the allegations of corruption against President Biden and his family, was indicted on a charge of acting as an illegal arms broker and an unregistered agent for China. Republicans immediately alleged a new conspiracy theory: that the Biden administration was âtrying to silence our witnessesâ (Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina) and that the timing is not âcoincidentalâ (Oversight Chairman James Comer of Kentucky).
But there was a small problem with the new conspiracy theory: Though the indictment was just unsealed, Luft was charged all the way back on Nov. 1, 2022 â before Republicans even took over the House. It appears his âwhistleblowingâ came after his indictment.
Or take the National Defense Authorization Act, the sprawling, $886 billion legislation that sets priorities for the U.S. military. It sailed through committee on a 58-1 vote and was on its way to overwhelming passage on the House floor this week.
But then the conspiracy mongers intervened, demanding that the House vote on amendments designed to address all manner of conjured problems that they claimed were making the U.S. military âweak.â
Roy said military recruitment was âin the toiletâ because of critical race theory, âa large-scale effort to impose ⌠tyranny over the minds of man.â The Texas Republican, claiming the military had turned into a âsocial-engineering experiment,â alleged: âThe American people I talk to back home donât want a weak or a woke military.â
Republicans Ralph Norman (S.C.) and Matthew Rosendale (Mont.) each suggested that it was the handling of transgender people that is âweakeningâ the military. âThatâs why weâre down 30 percent in recruitment,â Norman claimed.
And Rep. Warren Davidson (R-Ohio), who has opposed the flying of the Pride flag, claimed the military is suffering a âloss of focusâ because of âwoke ideology.â
They seemed not to grasp that, perhaps, military recruitment was off because, as Democratic Rep. Adam Smith (Wash.) put it, âa lot of Republicans are running around talking about how terribly weak our military is.â
Predictably, the debate turned ugly. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) sought to ban âradical gender ideology booksâ from base libraries, in particular one that describes âpornography and masturbation.â Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.) claimed his anti-diversity amendment âhas nothing to do with whether colored people or black people or anybody can serve.â His reference to âcolored peopleâ was struck from the record.
A better leader would have rejected such attempts to besmirch the mighty U.S. military. But McCarthy couldnât tell the conspiracy peddlers to take a hike. He needs their votes to keep his job. And so he gave them votes on a long list of poison pill amendments â abortion, diversity, transgender rights and more â that instantly turned the defense-authorization bill from a bipartisan triumph into a partisan donnybrook.
Running the House must be exhausting when even the easy things get tripped up by the never-ending lies. It would be so much easier just to tell the truth.
This might be my favorite story of the month. This is a lightning rod of material.