Las Vegas Review-Journal

White House: King’s supremacy remark ‘abhorrent’

- By Matthew Daly The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Comments by Republican Rep. Steve King about white supremacy are “abhorrent,” the White House said Wednesday as bipartisan condemnati­on of King continued.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders praised a move by House Republican­s to strip the nine-term Iowa lawmaker of his committee assignment­s.

King told The New York Times last week that, “White nationalis­t, white supremacis­t, Western civilizati­on — how did that language become offensive?”

The comments were widely denounced as racist.

The House on Tuesday approved a Democratic measure rebuking King, and a member of the House Republican leadership suggested King should leave Congress.

House Democratic leaders, meanwhile, blocked an effort to censure King, referring a proposal by Illinois Rep. Bobby Rush to the House Ethics Committee for further review.

Censure is the most serious sanction for a House member short of expulsion, and it has been imposed only six times in the past 100 years.

Rush, the sole House member to oppose the earlier measure rebuking King, pressed for a vote Wednesday to censure King, saying the House should take a stronger stand against what he called “Steve King’s violent, vitriolic and rabid racism.”

After the House clerk read Rush’s resolution detailing a string of inflammato­ry comments by King over the years, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland moved to refer the matter to the Ethics Committee. Lawmakers approved the motion on a voice vote, postponing action on the censure measure indefinite­ly.

“I think we have spoken, and we have spoken on both sides of the aisle, that this is unacceptab­le rhetoric and behavior,” Hoyer said.

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Steve King

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