California teacher under fire for leading pre-schoolers in an anti-Biden chant: report

According to Siders, “In speeches, ads and on social media, it is fast becoming the defining smear of the 2022 primary campaign season: RINO. The acronym — short for ‘Republican-In-Name-Only’ — is hardly new. But former President Donald Trump’s frequent use of the term has given it a new life, weaponizing a description once largely reserved for party moderates and turning it into a slur to be avoided at all costs.”

As the Politico report notes, use of the term has exploded recently and is being by followers of Trump with their eye on ousting and replacing incumbents.

“The mushrooming of the insult is measurable. In 2018, during the last midterm election, RINO barely registered as a mention in TV ads, according to an analysis compiled for POLITICO by the ad tracking firm AdImpact. But so far in 2022, candidates have already spent more than $4 million on TV ads employing RINO as an attack, in races ranging from House and Senate contests to state House races,” the report states. “That doesn’t include the raft of RINO-focused appeals appearing on social media and in mailers — or the ‘RINO Hunter’ T-shirts worn by a group of far-right Republicans at a local GOP meeting in California’s Orange County earlier this year, with crosshairs in place of the ‘O.'”

According to the report, the term is being flung around without regard to a lawmaker’s conservative background and has been applied to Trump for Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) as well as Trump defender Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) depending on the circumstances.

RELATED: ‘Blowhard jerk’ Ron DeSantis is the GOP’s best chance to ‘move on from Trump’: conservative

“For the MAGA set, the term has become a useful shorthand to refer to the establishment. It’s effective in part, said Jim McLaughlin, a veteran Republican pollster, because it’s a phrase that ‘comes out of the mouths of the voters, that comes out of the mouths of the base.’ There is a sense of familiarity that is reinforced when a candidate insults ‘squishy’

Republicans just like they do,” Siders wrote.

“The use of RINO has become so widespread that it can now include almost any Republican, including some of the most conservative stalwarts in the party,” the Politico report continued. ” During just the past six months, the list of Republicans Trump has branded with the term includes Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey and ‘RINO Congressman Peter Meijer.’ ‘Loser Liz Cheney’ is a Republican-In-Name-Only. So is Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, former President George W. Bush and the entire Maricopa County Board of Supervisors. Rejection of Trump’s false claims of election fraud — or worse, a vote to impeach the former president — are common threads among those targeted by the former president for the insult.”

According to James Dickey, the former chair of the Texas Republican Party, the term is getting overused and might be losing some of its power.

“When a candidate uses that today against someone, I read that as a sign of desperation, that they don’t have the ability or the willingness to specify what they have a problem with, so they’re trying to just engender a sense that their opponent is not committed,” Dickey explained.

GOP strategist Rory McShane agreed, telling Politico: “You can’t just say this person is a RINO. Republican primary voters are anesthetized to that. I think it’s become cliché. You have to explain how they’ve betrayed the conservative movement.”

*story by rawstory.com