Democrat Hank Johnson Compares Concerned Parents at School Board Meetings to January 6 Rioters

Representative Hank Johnson scorned parents protesting at local school boards as "MAGA Republicans" and compared them to violent rioters during the January 6 riot at the Capitol.
Screenshot: Twitter Video, @greg_price11

Representative Hank Johnson scorned parents protesting at local school boards as “MAGA Republicans” and compared them to violent rioters during the January 6 riot at the Capitol.

Johnson’s (D-GA) comments were part of a hearing by the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday to discuss a resolution requesting President Biden provide documents pertaining to a memo from Attorney General Merrick Garland back in October of 2021.

The memo was about the FBI addressing parents who ‘pose a threat’ at school board meetings after a controversial letter by the National School Boards Association (NSBA) compared concerned parents to domestic terrorists.

As with any good Democrat argument, Johnson’s commentary began with a lie.

RELATED: Report: DOJ Used 9/11-Era Patriot Act Terrorism Law To Obtain Search Warrant On January 6 Defendants

Hank Johnson Compares Parents to Rioters

“January 6, 2021, will never be forgotten, an infamous day in American history. MAGA Republicans descended upon the Capitol, engaged in an insurrection. They occupied the Capitol,” Johnson said.

“Five people were killed, hundreds injured, including hundreds of Capitol Hill police officers attacked and bludgeoned,” he added. “It was a day that we’ll never forget.”

Except, that isn’t true.

The only person who was actually killed that day was unarmed Air Force veteran Ashli Babbitt, who was shot by a Capitol Police officer. Several others died from non-violent causes.

Johnson then directly equates the events of January 6 to parents protesting extreme gender ideology and critical race theory at school board meetings.

“And people on the local level at affected school board meetings, they won’t forget the MAGA Republicans descending on their school board meetings after January 6, like January 6, disrupting meetings,” he said.

“It was a coordinated attack happening across the country,” Johnson added without evidence. “Americans won’t forget about it. School board members, teachers, administrators, subjected to violence, threats of violence, harassment, intimidation.”

RELATED: Report: National School Board Association Wanted Military Deployed At School Board Meetings

Claims There Was No Coordination

To simply cast aside any criticisms from parents at school board meetings as a ‘coordinated attack’ by fringe elements of the far-right is reckless and unintelligent.

Hank Johnson went on to claim there was “not one scintilla of evidence” that the Biden administration had coordinated with the NSBA over the letter regarding parents.

The final letter requested an investigation into whether or not confrontations from outraged parents regarding mask mandates or Critical Race Theory (CRT) curricula amounted to a violation of the Patriot Act.

The NSBA suggested at the time that “the classification of these heinous actions could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.”

But, as The Political Insider noted in November of 2021, internal emails showed that the NSBA coordinated heavily with the White House over the letter.

The NSBA had discussed the issues with the White House “for weeks” before sending the letter, according to one report.

Two weeks prior to the release of the controversial letter, according to an emailed memo, “there had been a meeting with White House staff … and that NSBA was preparing to send a letter to the President.”

The Georgia lawmaker once famously asked during a House Armed Services Committee hearing if the island of Guam might capsize if too many people were on it.

“My fear is that the whole island will become so overly populated that it will tip over and capsize,” Johnson said to Adm. Robert Willard, head of the U.S. Pacific fleet at the time.

Willard, seemingly taken aback for a brief moment then replied, “We don’t anticipate that.”

Johnson would later suggest he was simply joking and using his “sense of humor” with the comment.

He once lamented that budget cuts would lead to a “world without balloons.

Johnson would also be forced to apologize after making a bizarre analogy involving “midgets” on the House floor in 2012.

“I was thinking to myself earlier today, what happens when you put in a cage fight a giant with a midget?” Johnson said then.

“Well, the midget will not win the fight. I’m going to tell you that. Why? He just doesn’t carry enough weight to do so. But if you put 30 midgets in with that giant, then the midgets have a chance,” he added.

If Hank Johnson could somehow muster up energy to form a coherent thought, he might have a chance.

He might not make comments comparing parents to rioters, wondering if an island could tip over, and having to apologize to the “Little People of America.”

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Rusty Weiss has been covering politics for over 15 years. His writings have appeared in the Daily Caller, Fox... More about Rusty Weiss

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