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Image: Joseph McCarthy Holding Large Photographs
Republican Senator Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin attempts to persuade Army Secretary Robert Stevens, (not shown), to agree that it was "not significant" that the picture introduced at the Senate hearing on the previous day had been cropped to remove a third man. Using an April 26th picture, McCarthy crops out the third man from the prints introduced on April 27, 1954, showing Stevens with Pvt. G. David Schine and an Army Colonel, by Army Lawyer Joseph N. Welch.Bettmann / Bettmann Archive via Getty Images

Arizona Republican urges people to 'be more like' Joe McCarthy

For some on the right, Joe McCarthy wasn't a villain, and McCarthyism wasn't such a bad thing after all.

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Between 2010 and 2018, Arizona's Wendy Rogers ran for elected office in every election cycle. It didn't go well: After five attempts, she'd lost five times.

But in 2020, the far-right Republican was elected to Arizona's state Senate, where she helped champion the state's utterly bonkers election "audit" and became one of Donald Trump's favorite allies.

It's against this backdrop that Mediaite noted this week:

Arizona State Senator Wendy Rogers tweeted a photo of late U.S. Senator Joe McCarthy on Saturday, with text encouraging people to follow in his footsteps of getting, "rid of the communists."

The Republican legislator specifically urged people to "be more like" Joe McCarthy, which is a phrase that was quite uncommon in American politics up until recent years.

Indeed, this is the latest reminder that for much of the right, McCarthyism isn't a bad thing, and seeing McCarthy as a villain is a mistake.

Steve Bannon, for example, has praised McCarthy's radical campaign against communist infiltration, and as we've discussed, he's not alone.

A reporter from the Dallas Morning News told Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in 2013 that he'd been compared at times to McCarthy. The Texan said the criticism might be "a sign that perhaps we're doing something right," which seemed like a curious response given the context.

Asked specifically, "Is McCarthy someone you admire?" Cruz wouldn't answer.

A few years earlier, conservative activists rewriting Texas' state's curriculum briefly recommended telling students that McCarthy was a hero who'd been "vindicated" by history.

When thinking about the differences between the contemporary Republican Party and how much it's changed over the last generation, look no further than those who've decided McCarthyism wasn't so bad after all.