Az Sen. Wendy Rogers facing Senate ethics probe after blaming Buffalo mass shooting on ‘feds’
Posted May 16, 2022, 7:53 pm
The Arizona Senate is launching an
ethics investigation into Republican Sen. Wendy Rogers for her comments
on social media blaming the mass shooting in Buffalo on Saturday on
federal law enforcement instead of the white supremacist who is accused of carrying out the attack.
While the Senate moved to investigate
Rogers, a Flagstaff Republican who has a history of outlandish and
racist comments online, GOP legislators rejected an attempt by Democrats
to immediately expel her.
Only minutes after a white 18-year-old
armed with an assault rifle and outfitted with body armor allegedly shot and
killed 10 people — most of them Black — in a Buffalo grocery store on
May 14, Rogers tweeted “fed boy summer has started in Buffalo.” She has
previously used the term “feds” to describe white supremacist and neo-Nazi groups, seeking to blame federal law enforcement for the actions of racists.
Rogers’ use of the phrase “fed boy summer” appears to be a nod to “white boy summer,” a viral meme used by neo-Nazis and white nationalists in 2021. White nationalist leader Nick Fuentes adopted the phrase for his summer road trip last year, including an alleged event with Prescott Republican Congressman Paul Gosar, who later denied it.
Rogers attended Fuentes’ America First Political Action Conference
earlier this year via video. She gave a speech in which she fantasized
about hanging political enemies and called those in attendance
“patriots,” speaking shortly after others who shared nakedly white nationalist views on stage.
The Buffalo shooter was apparently heavily inspired by and plagiarized the manifesto
of the 2019 New Zealand Christchurch mosque shooter who held deeply
fascist beliefs and that the white race was being “replaced” by
immigrants. Rogers herself has echoed this belief and defended it online.
Rogers in 2021 retweeted an article
by far-right outlet Breitbart Texas about migrant apprehensions, along
with the comment that “we are being replaced and invaded.” The language
is the same used by those who promote the “Great Replacement Theory.”
The manifesto of the Christchurch shooter was titled “The Great
Replacement” and the theory is popular among extremist groups such as
the American Identity Movement and Generation Identity.
It has also begun to find traction in mainstream Republican political discourse, and has been espoused by Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
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The Buffalo shooter’s diary and manifesto released online and analyzed by extremist researchers
shows that he meticulously planned his attack and sought to emulate the
Christchurch shooter, seeking out areas with high Black populations.
Rogers also shared posts on the encrypted messaging chat Telegram Monday morning alluding to the long defunct CIA program called MK Ultra which has become a hotbed for conspiracy theorists.
“What is #MKUltra?” Rogers wrote. “A lot of things make sense when you understand that one.”
The CIA program that unsuccessfully attempted mind control has been at the forefront of conspiracy theories — some claim that celebrities are being controlled — and some conspiracy theorists have been claiming without evidence
that the Buffalo shooter is a “victim” of the program. Users in Rogers’
comments quickly made the connection between her post and the shooting,
as well.
Gov. Doug Ducey, whose political
action committee spent $500,000 to get Rogers elected in 2020,
previously said having Rogers in the legislature was better than
electing a Democrat. Ducey’s office could not be reached for comment on
whether he still shares that belief and whether he supports or condemns
the “Great Replacement Theory.”
Republicans backed an investigation, but balked at expelling Rogers
The Senate voted 24-3 to approve an
investigation by the Senate Ethics Committee. Democrats voted for the
investigation, though some lamented that the committee has a habit of
sweeping issues under the rug.
Sen. Martin Quezada said the Ethics
Committee rarely takes investigations past the initial stages, and no
members of the chamber are ever held accountable.
That sentiment was shared by Sen.
Victoria Steele, who is one of two Democrats on the ethics panel. She
swatted aside GOP claims that Rogers needed “due process,” noting that
Rogers was previously censured and has already faced one ethics
investigation, but has not improved her behavior.
“What happened over this weekend was
not doing better. What happened over this weekend was an embarrassment
to all of the good people who serve in this Senate – who have ever
served in this body,” Steele said. “Spewing hate and furthering racist
comments is not what we should be here for. My fear with this vote to
move to the Ethics Committee is that it’s been my experience nothing
happens — and this will be no different.”
Steele added that this vote is “too
little too late,” but it was her only option at this point and she
worries that everything will be prolonged to after the election where
Rogers could likely win and be back in the chamber for a second term
unscathed.
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In a separate motion, Democrats
sought to expel Rogers. Had it succeeded, it would have been only the
fifth expulsion in state history; but with three senators absent, it was
doomed to fail, and subsequently did on an 11-15 vote.
Rogers was censured just two months ago
Rogers last year faced an ethics investigation only weeks into her freshman term, which was ultimately dismissed. Her colleagues also voted to censure
her in March, after she spoke to Fuentes’ white nationalist conference.
However, she was not censured for speaking to the group, calling for
violence or a series of antisemitic social media postings in the run up
the conference. Rather, the censure was because she threatened members of the Senate with retribution if they supported the censure.
Rogers celebrated the censure on her Telegram channel, sharing artwork created by a known white nationalist artist that declared her a “certified American Patriot.”
While Monday’s vote to investigate
Rogers had overwhelming support, many Republicans who voted to launch
the investigation said they didn’t know what Rogers had posted online or
what it meant. Similar reasoning was used to justify voting against
immediately expelling her.
“It’s obnoxious,” Sen. Michelle
Ugenti-Rita said of the motion to expel. “The voters can make a choice,
the election is not far away.”
Sen. J.D. Mesnard said he was unaware
of the controversy that had occurred involving Rogers and had arrived
on the floor not knowing why it had started late, only to learn that
they’d be voting to expel a member.
“This would be one of the most historic moments in the Senate’s history if we did this,” Mesnard said.
Recent examples of expulsions or
resignations came as the result of monthslong ethics investigations –
both of which happened in the state House of Representatives. Republican
Rep. Don Shooter was expelled in 2018 after many women – including
fellow lawmakers – came forward accusing him of sexual harassment. And
Republican David Stringer resigned in 2019 after it was revealed he had
sex with young boys decades earlier while living in Maryland.
Free speech, due process and no information
The only votes against the ethics
investigation came from Rogers, Sen. Kelly Townsend and Sen. Warren
Petersen. Townsend is running against Rogers in the Republican primary
for District 7 after the pair were drawn into the same district during
redistricting last year.
Petersen, on the other hand, said he
was voting no for a lack of information on the entire situation. He was
also one of three votes against Rogers’ censure in March –joining Rogers
and Sen. Nancy Barto.
“I just walked on the floor. I hadn’t
even heard what the tweet was or what was done and, Madame President,
without seeing the tweet myself or understanding what this is … I don’t
know that this is appropriate,” Petersen said.
Townsend said she disagreed with what
Rogers said on Twitter, but that she still had a right to say them
under the First Amendment. While the First Amendment gives people the
right to free speech, it does not protect them from being held
accountable for what is said, a point Townsend conceded while voting
against the motion.
“I have to defend a person’s right to
say ugly things,” Townsend said after noting that she’s in between a
“rock and a hard place” for holding Rogers accountable for her speech.
She added that she was embarrassed that Arizona was once again receiving
national headlines for something that doesn’t paint the state in a
positive light.
She said Rogers’ words minimized the pain of the families who are grieving in Buffalo, but she still voted no.
Townsend also has a history of making antisemitic comments, including comparing the COVID-19 pandemic to the Holocaust. Her past in far-right circles has been well-documented dating back to the early stages of the Tea Party.
Rogers did not speak on the Senate floor though she did send out a statement
later in the evening blaming the “race-obsessed” media for taking her
words out of context. Even though there was not any other context
provided in her original tweet.
Sen. Sean Bowie was the only Democrat
who voted against the motion to expel Rogers, and he echoed his
Republican colleagues by saying it was about due process. He did not
speak on the floor, but told the Arizona Mirror afterward that he had only learned of the social media posts and motion to expel when he arrived on the floor.
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Bowie voted for the March censure and
voted to investigate Rogers’ comments, but said voting to expel without
that necessary process “sets a bad precedent.”
When asked if speech could ever be
bad enough to remove a member, Bowie said it depends on the content and
the pattern, but that everyone needs that chance for due process even
Rogers who he said both has the content and pattern of behavior.
Ultimately, he said the maneuver by his chamber today felt like politics, especially since expulsions need a two-thirds vote.
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