Democrats tie Trump's rhetoric to spate
of suspected bombs
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[October 25, 2018]
By Ginger Gibson and Jeff Mason
MILWAUKEE/MOSINEE, Wis. (Reuters) - The
undercurrent of rage that has been driving U.S. politics for the past
few years surfaced on Wednesday in a series of suspected bombs sent to
prominent U.S. Democrats and the news outlet CNN less than two weeks
before congressional elections.
None of the devices went off and no injuries were reported, but a number
of top Democrats were quick to label the threats a symptom of a
coarsening brand of political rhetoric promoted by President Donald
Trump, who also condemned the acts.
Police intercepted six suspected bombs sent to targets including Trump's
2016 presidential rival, Hillary Clinton, former President Barack Obama
and prominent political donor George Soros. Law enforcement agencies
were investigating.
During his presidential campaign, Trump regularly urged his supporters
to chant "Lock her up," a threat to jail Clinton, and supported
conspiracy theories that Soros plays an underhanded role in influencing
U.S. politics. Trump has also disparaged the mainstream media and
criticized CNN as "fake news."
At a political rally in Wisconsin on Wednesday night, Trump sought to
project a message of unity, pledging to find those responsible for the
suspected bombs and calling on Americans to come together.
"You see how nice I’m behaving tonight? Have you ever seen this?" he
asked the crowd in Mosinee, Wisconsin. "We’re all behaving very well and
hopefully we can keep it that way."
Democrats were having none of it, saying the Republican president had
little credibility to act as a unifying figure.
"President Trump's words ring hollow until he reverses his statements
that condone acts of violence," Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer
and House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said in a statement earlier in
the day.
"For years now, Donald Trump has been calling for the jailing of his
critics and has lauded violence against journalists," said U.S.
Representative Bill Pascrell, a New Jersey Democrat. "The danger of
right-wing extremism cannot be ignored and more attention must be paid
to it before even worse violence occurs."
Politicians from both major parties have made condemning the harsh tone
of politics part of their everyday stump speeches.
Republicans have criticized Democrats and liberal activists as a "mob,"
decrying protesters crowding the U.S. Capitol to oppose Trump's Supreme
Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, and confronting and chastising Republican
lawmakers in restaurants and other settings. Scenes of small-scale
violence also marked Trump's 2017 inauguration.
A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll found rising anger would be a factor driving
voters on the Nov. 6 elections when Democrats are seeking to regain
control of at least one of the two chambers of Congress.
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(Top L-R) U.S. Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, former
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Democratic Party
donor George Soros and former U.S. President Barack Obama are
pictured along with (Bottom L-R) former U.S. Attorney General Eric
Holder, U.S. Congresswoman Maxine Waters and Former CIA director
John Brennan in a combination photograph made from Reuters file
photos. REUTERS/Files
HEATED TONE
Trump sometimes invokes images of violence in remarks to his
supporters. Last week, he reiterated his support for a Montana
congressman who body-slammed a reporter in 2017. In August, Trump
warned that if Democrats gained control of Congress, they would
"quickly and violently" overturn his agenda.
Last year, he said there were bad people on both sides of a clash in
Charlottesville, Virginia, between white supremacist groups and
counter-protesters.
Some of the people who received suspicious packages, including
Obama, Clinton and former Attorney General Eric Holder, have been
targeted by online groups such as QAnon that push vast conspiracy
theories saying Democrats are behind international crime rings.
Posts on online message boards dismissed the cluster of suspected
bombs as a "false flag," an allegation that a widely covered news
event was a politically motivated hoax.
Paul Achter, a professor of rhetoric at the University of Richmond,
said Trump's frequently violent tone increased the likelihood of
violent actions.
"Verbal abuse has consequences," Achter said. "Just because Trump
did not send a bomb or beat up a reporter or shoot up a newsroom
doesn't excuse this kind of speech."
But Republican U.S. Representative Steve Scalise, who was wounded
last year by a gunman who opened fire on Republican lawmakers during
a baseball practice, said it was a mistake for Democrats to
criticize Trump for the suspected bombs.
"I think it was important that the President did come out with a
statement the way he did - strongly," Scalise said in a statement.
"I heard silence a lot of times, when Republicans were under attack,
from Democrat leaders. We all should be calling this out, whether a
Republican or Democrat is under attack."
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson in Milwaukee and Jeff Mason in Mosinee,
Wis.; Editing by Scott Malone and Peter Cooney)
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