China Daily

Washington embraces unity — for a moment

Congress seeks normalcy and heads back to work after shooting

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We can all agree that ... our children deserve to grow up in a nation of safety and peace and that we are strongest when we are unified.” Donald Trump, US president

WASHINGTON — The president called on all citizens of the United States to set aside their difference­s. One of his fiercest critics prayed for him and the safety of his family.

For one afternoon, Washington appeared to be knocked back into a lost era of solidarity in times of trial. Still, it felt naive to think it would last.

Wednesday’s jarring shooting of top House Republican Steve Scalise during a baseball practice both punctured the deep polarizati­on in the nation’s capital and provided an instant reminder that such moments tend to be fleeting.

After incidents far more deadly, and at times even less rived with division, the moment of unity inevitably fades, replaced by the capital’s familiar infighting and harsh, personal attacks.

That was the case after the horrific shooting of 20 elementary school children in 2012. And after the 2011 shooting of Arizona Representa­tive Gabrielle Giffords, who was holding a constituen­t event in a supermarke­t parking lot when a gunman opened fire, killing six people.

The nation was divided then, too, still struggling to recover from a devastatin­g economic crisis that exacerbate­d the gap between haves and have nots, and from the bruising political tussle over healthcare reform. Mark Kimble, who worked for Giffords then, said that for a period “that now seems all too brief, there was an unbelievab­le amount of unity across party lines”.

“If this happens the way it did after Gabby was shot, I think it will last for a while, but I don’t think it will be any kind of sea change in how Washington operates ,” Kimble said.

Calls for change

The calls for change were frequent on Wednesday.

House Speaker Paul Ryan urged his colleagues “to come together to lift each other up and to show the country, show the world that we are one House, the people’s House, united in our humanity”.

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi decried the violence as “an injury in the family”. She offered her prayers for Donald Trump and his family.

But the answer to how long Washington can embrace this moment of unity may well rest with Trump, one of the most divisive figures in recent US political history.

Trump, in brief remarks from the White House Diplomatic Room, was scripted and restrained. He made no mention of the fact that the shooter had a history of lashing out at Republican­s.

“We may have our difference­s, but we do well in times like these to remember that everyone who serves in our nation’s capital is here because, above all, they love our country,” he said. “We can all agree that we are blessed to be Americans, that our children deserve to grow up in a nation of safety and peace and that we are strongest when we are unified.”

Trump stepped into the role of unifier with historical­ly low approval ratings for a president at this stage of his tenure.

Overall, 64 percent disapprove and just 35 percent approve of the job he is doing as president, according to a recent poll.

The business of the House is resuming a day after the shooting and the annual congressio­nal baseball game, scheduled for Thursday, will go on as planned, lawmakers announced.

Also on Wednesday, a UPS employee who had recently filed a grievance opened fire inside one of the company’s San Francisco packing facilities, killing three co-workers before fatally shooting himself as employees fled franticall­y into the streets shouting “shooter!,” authoritie­s and witnesses said.

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