‘Trying to Silence Parents’ Flops Again
“Falsehood flies, and truth comes limping after it.” – Jonathon Swift
Around this time last year, Glenn Youngkin seized upon a Department of Justice memo on the rise of harassment and threat of violence against school board members. Youngkin flatly lied about the memo, claiming the DOJ was “trying to silence parents standing up for their kids.” Despite a thorough debunking from none other than Attorney General Merrick Garland himself, Youngkin rode the lie to victory in November’s gubernatorial election.
A few of Youngkin’s constituents tried to push his lie on a federal judge appointed by former President Trump. It did not go well (Law and Crime).
The memo quickly sparked outrage from conservative media and lawmakers on Capitol Hill — and even a federal lawsuit from parents claiming it was a blueprint to “silence” them.
On Friday, a federal judge appointed by Donald Trump jettisoned the lawsuit, finding that the parents and the groups representing them misread the less than 300-word memo.
Youngkin clearly hoped Virginia voters would be more trusting of him – and thus, less likely to actually read the memo – than Judge Friedrich was. Sadly, he was right.