Matt Gaetz is the model Republican representative, an issue that no one is surprised by

Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz, a 38-year-old child pampered by a wealthy Florida man who has never had to earn an honest dollar in his life, is allegedly a part-time predator, a youth-loving thing, which he emphatically denies, and that it is unquestionably a full-time flow. Quelle’s surprise: There seems to be more slime in Florida’s first district representative than in all of the Everglades.

It’s hard to say exactly what made the exposure to Gaetz’s dirt so predictable for people who were out of the belt. It could have been the 16 speeding and DUI tickets, his aspiring father’s relationship with former President Donald Trump, that time he took a picture of himself to make fun of COVID-19 with a gas mask, his friendship with right-wing figures such as Holocaust denier Charles Johnson, media appearances where he appeared bewildered, or the fact that he is known to have pursued a popular Tallahassee college bar while serving as state legislator.

Maybe it was the moment he lamented not being able to “chase” the antifa like the military hunting terrorists, or the moment he publicly expressed creepy Tiffany Trump, 22, or the moment threatened a congressional witness the night before he was supposed to testify and then tried to assault the sight of a committee where he was not, or the moment he tried to attack another hearing related to the dismissal that took place in a SCIF. Or maybe it’s his sweet, funny air that reminds everyone of the most annoying guy they went to college with or the giant low glasses in his eyes that shrank and shrunk like a spring break hangover.

But it was definitely something, as the people inside the belt showed a surprisingly similar level. The general response of his party compatriots seems to be, “of course.” In fact, according to reports, many in his party say they saw Gaetz’s public relations problems a mile away; then Attorney General Bill Barr, who knew the investigation, avoided appearing in photos and receiving cable news with him, and it seems likely that some of his colleagues in Congress were doing the same to avoid the bad PR that would inevitably come .

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