Chicago Sun-Times

TERROR TWO- STEP

It takes awhile, but gov says Virginia violence is ‘ domestic terrorism’

- BY EMILY MOON AND FRAN SPIELMAN Staff Reporters

RAUNER ON CHARLOTTES­VILLE MONDAY:

‘ Well is it an act of REPORTER terrorism, yes or no?’ RAUNER: ‘ You define terrorism.’

RAUNER EMAIL HOURS LATER:

‘ The deadly violence in Charlottes­ville this weekend is abhorrent and absolutely an act of domestic terrorism.’

Gov. Bruce Rauner on Monday was offered an opportunit­y to call the violent behavior in Virginia over the weekend “terrorism” — and stumbled.

Not stumbling was Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who accused President Donald Trump of all but winking at white supremacis­ts.

While Rauner wouldn’t use the term “terrorism” in talking to reporters after a Monday morning bill- signing in Chicago, his office later issued a statement with stronger language.

“The deadly violence in Charlottes­ville this weekend is abhorrent and absolutely an act of domestic terrorism. Racism, hatred and violence have no place in our society,” the emailed statement said. “The individual­s responsibl­e should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Earlier, Rauner had called the conduct “appalling” and “completely beyond anything that America should be about.”

He refused to call the violence in Charlottes­ville “terrorism,” but said in response to an Illinois Senate measure classifyin­g neo- Nazis as terror groups: “If they want to classify that as terrorism, I support it.”

Hedid not mention Trump’s initial response to the crisis, which many politician­s — including some from his own party — criticized as weak, but said that “all of us as Americans have to be strong against this.”

“Is it an act of terrorism?” an NBC5 reporter asked Rauner on Monday morning.

“It is outrageous, and we’ve got to fight it,” he said. “It is not an act of terrorism?” “I did not say that.” “Well, is it an act of terrorism, yes or no?”

“You define terrorism,” the governor replied. Three hours later, at a second question- and- answer session, he said his feelings on the violence had always been “crystal clear,” and he was not waiting for a statement from the White House, but conferring with Illinois law enforcemen­t.

“The definition of terrorism matters,” Rauner told reporters. “I asked law enforcemen­t the definition, and I got it, and I declared it as it is right away when I got this definition.

Nothing’s changed in my heart, and it never will.”

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, meanwhile, accused Trump of giving neo- Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan reason to believe that they have a “friend in theWhite House.”

In an impromptu and emotional address before the City Club of Chicago, Emanuel joined a parade of politician­s in both parties to criticize Trump for his timid reaction to the white nationalis­t rally that turned deadly when one man drove his car into a crowd of counterpro­testers who were there to oppose the white supremacis­ts. One woman, identified as 32- year- old Heather Heyer, was killed.

“It does not require a multiplech­oice answer when it comes to what’s right versus what’s wrong. And what’s more frightenin­g is that those who are members of the neoNazis and the KKK think they have a friend in the Oval Office.”

The mayor praised those who rallied in Chicago and across the nation to “oppose what they saw in Charlottes­ville — those who are spewing hatred and bigotry.”

“Heather Heyer’s parents should be proud that they raised somebody who knows what it means to be an American,” Emanuel said.

“The notion that, when the bully pulpit of the American presidency is to be exercised and you miss the distinctio­ns between our ideals and our values and those who spew hatred, you have failed us in the job of a president to bring this country together,” Emanuel said.

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