In Iowa, school shooting prompts Republican prayers, while Trump
campaigns by proxy
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[January 05, 2024]
By Gram Slattery and James Oliphant
SIOUX CITY, Iowa (Reuters) -A school shooting in Iowa, where Republican
nominating contests begin next week for the U.S. presidential election,
prompted prayers from among those wanting to be the party's candidate,
but elicited no substantial policy proposals among the top contenders.
The incident saw a sixth-grade student killed and five people wounded
after a 17-year-old opened fire on the first day of classes following
the winter break, law enforcement officials said.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is locked in a close battle for
second place in Iowa with former UN ambassador Nikki Haley, said in an
interview with NBC News and the Des Moines Register newspaper that
authorities have a "responsibility to create safe environments" at
school, but the federal government "is probably not going to be leading
that effort."
He added in a later interview that if he were president, he would sign a
bill abolishing the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives,
which plays a major role regulating guns in America.
The candidates' reactions underscored how deeply gun ownership rights,
which are enshrined in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
are valued by Republican caucus-goers in conservative Iowa.
Most of the candidates ardently oppose any efforts to regulate guns and
routinely dismiss calls for more gun control after mass shootings as
attempts to politicize tragedies.
Vivek Ramaswamy, who is polling fourth in Iowa, said in a statement that
he canceled a campaign event due to take place in Perry, where the
school shooting happened, and changed it into "a prayer and
conversation."
Haley offered her sympathies on X, the social media platform formerly
known as Twitter.
"No parent, student, or teacher should have to wake up and face news
about a school shooting," she wrote. "My heart aches for the victims of
Perry, Iowa and the entire community."
Former President Donald Trump, the clear frontrunner who looks set to
face President Biden in November's election, made no public comment
about the incident.
Here are some other takeaways from the campaign trail:
TRUMP CAMPAIGNS BY PROXY
Donald Trump's campaign on Wednesday night held one of the largest
events of the Iowa presidential caucuses this January, and the
Republican frontrunner was not even there.
Hundreds of the former president's supporters piled into a convention
center in Sioux City, braving bitter temperatures and flurries to hear
South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem speak on Trump's behalf.
Many attendees were emblazoned head-to-toe in Trump gear, while vendors
outside sold merchandise from Trump T-shirts to stickers to keychains.
Trump is scheduled to host eight events in person before the Jan. 15
caucus, a small number when compared to the other candidates. DeSantis
held four events on Wednesday alone.
Instead, Trump is relying on his allies.
In addition to Noem, firebrand far-right Representative Marjorie Taylor
Greene and Eric Trump, one of the president's sons, hosted events in the
eastern part of the state on Thursday. Ben Carson, Trump's former
housing secretary, will host an event next week.
Trump has opted to attend many of the court proceedings related to his
business dealings and his attempts to overturn his presidential loss to
Biden. He is expected to appear at a federal appeals court hearing next
week regarding the scope of his presidential immunity while in office.
If his voters care he is absent from some of his campaign events in
Iowa, they are not letting it show. The Noem event was far larger than
two DeSantis events in western Iowa on Wednesday, one of which was right
down the road.
Dwayne Brown, a Trump supporter wearing a T-shirt with the former
president's mugshot, praised Noem for keeping South Dakota largely open
during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Law enforcement officers respond to a school shooting at the Perry
Middle School and High School complex in Perry, Iowa, U.S., January
4, 2024. REUTERS/Cheney Orr
"Everything was open, except for the restrooms on the interstate,"
he said.
As the night wore down, an elderly woman stood on a chair in front
of the stage and waved a "Caucus for Trump" sign while dancing to
ABBA. After most attendees left, a pick-up truck flying a pair of
Trump flags circled the empty parking lot.
DESANTIS, HALEY NEEDLE TRUMP, IGNORE EACH OTHER
At back-to-back televised town halls on Thursday night, DeSantis and
Haley took targeted swipes at Trump, with the Florida governor
attacking the former president's record on abortion and Haley
warning he would bring "four more years of chaos" to the White
House.
Asked if the former president was "pro-life," DeSantis replied:
"Course not. I mean, when you're saying that pro-life protections
are a terrible thing, by definition, you are not pro-life."
Most Republican caucus-goers in Iowa are firm opponents of abortion
rights, and the DeSantis camp has tried to position the Florida
governor as a more resolute defender of their position than Trump.
But while DeSantis and Haley dialed up the heat on certain elements
of Trump's policies, they largely avoided talking about his
character. Despite being locked in a tight battle for second in
Iowa, neither candidate spent much time talking about one another.
Both candidates appeared to turn in solid performances, but neither
produced a moment that would alter the dynamics of the Iowa contest,
which Trump leads by more than 30 points.
Haley reiterated she would pardon Trump if he were convicted of
crimes related to attempts to overturn his 2020 presidential
election loss to Biden.
DeSantis said that Jan. 6, 2021, the date a mob of Trump supporters
attacked the U.S. Capitol building, was "not a good day for the
country."
He added, though, that the "media has taken that and I think the
left has taken that and really tried to politicize it."
HALEY: ONE STATE WILL 'CORRECT' ANOTHER
Haley drew fire from rivals on Thursday after saying voters deciding
on their party's candidate in New Hampshire, where polls put her
second behind Trump, will "correct" the vote in Iowa, where she
faces a much tougher contest.
"You know how to do this. You know Iowa starts it. You know that you
correct it," Haley told an audience in New Hampshire on Wednesday
evening, prompting laughter and applause.
Haley, who served as U.N. ambassador under Trump, and DeSantis are
vying to become the clear alternative to Trump in a contest that is
already down to six candidates.
After months of campaigning, Iowans will be the first to pick their
preferred nominee in their caucuses, followed by New Hampshire's
primary on Jan. 23.
DeSantis, who has staked a huge amount on a strong result in Iowa,
seized on Haley's comments in a radio interview.
"I think it was incredibly disrespectful to Iowans to say somehow
their votes need to be, quote, corrected. I think she's trying to
provide an excuse for her not doing well," he said on KFAB radio.
Haley defended her statement during the town hall on Thursday,
saying she was making a light-hearted joke.
"New Hampshire makes fun of Iowa. Iowa makes fun of South Carolina,"
she said. "It's what we do."
(Reporting by Gram Slattery, James Oliphant and Costas Pitas;
Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Alistair Bell, Chris Reese and Tom
Hogue)
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