Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House hopeful lies low after assault charge

- BOBBY CAINA CALVAN

BOZEMAN, Mont. — A Republican congressio­nal candidate in Montana charged with shoving a reporter to the ground on the eve of a special election kept a low profile Thursday.

Greg Gianforte was charged with misdemeano­r assault after witnesses said he grabbed a reporter by the neck on Wednesday and threw him to the ground at Gianforte’s campaign headquarte­rs in Bozeman.

Gianforte, a tech entreprene­ur who has aligned himself with President Donald Trump, said the reporter was being aggressive and grabbed him by the wrist at his campaign office.

The altercatio­n occurred hours before voters went to the polls to decide whether Gianforte or Democrat Rob Quist will fill the U.S. House seat vacated by Ryan Zinke, a Republican who is now Trump’s Interior secretary.

Democratic Gov. Steve Bullock, who defeated Gianforte in November’s election, called Wednesday’s events “another wake up call to all Montanans and Americans that we must restore civility in politics and governing.”

Republican­s have held the state’s lone congressio­nal seat for two decades.

It wasn’t clear how the last-minute melee would affect the race. More than a third of the state’s registered voters had cast absentee ballots before polls opened Thursday.

Gianforte canceled a television appearance on MSNBC scheduled for Thursday night amid reports that Montana voters were calling state and county election officials in the hopes of changing their early votes. A spokesman for the Montana secretary of state’s office said they had received a dozen phone calls from voters Thursday morning.

“In Montana, we vote only once,” Christi Jacobsen, chief of staff to Secretary of State Corey Stapleton, wrote in an email. “Once you voted you can’t change your vote.”

Three of Montana’s biggest newspapers pulled their endorsemen­ts of Gianforte — without endorsing his opponent. The Billings Gazette, which serves Montana’s largest city, told readers that it had made a “poor choice” by ignoring “questionab­le interactio­ns” the candidate has had with reporters in the past.

Leaders of both major parties called on him to apologize. House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, said what occurred was “wrong and should not happen.” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, called Gianforte “a wannabe Trump.”

“I don’t think it probably changed very many minds or votes today, unfortunat­ely,” said voter Patrick Paradis, who supports Quist. “Politics are pretty entrenched right now in terms of who people are going to follow and who people are going to vote for.”

Gianforte was preparing for an interview with Fox News on Wednesday at a private office when Ben Jacobs, a reporter for The Guardian newspaper, came in without permission, campaign spokesman Shane Scanlon said.

As Jacobs pressed the candidate on the GOP health care bill, “Gianforte grabbed Jacobs by the neck with both hands and slammed him into the ground behind him,” Fox News reporter Alicia Acuna wrote in an article. She added that Gianforte then began to punch Jacobs.

In an audio recording posted by The Guardian, the reporter asks the congressio­nal candidate about the health care bill.

“We’ll talk to you about that later,” Gianforte says on the recording, referring Jacobs to a spokesman.

When Jacobs says there won’t be time, Gianforte says “Just—” and there is a crashing sound. Gianforte yells, “The last guy who came here did the same thing,” and a shaken-sounded Jacobs tells the candidate he just bodyslamme­d him.

“Get the hell out of here,” Gianforte says.

Gianforte’s whereabout­s weren’t immediatel­y known Thursday. Two people at his campaign headquarte­rs in Bozeman referred all questions to Scanlon, who could not be reached. A sign on a gate thanked people for not trespassin­g at Gianforte’s home.

Repeated phone calls to Gianforte’s cellphone went unreturned. Twice it seemed someone picked up then immediatel­y hung up.

Jacobs told ABC’s Good Morning America that he never touched Gianforte. He said of the politician’s account: “The only thing that is factually correct … is my name and place of employment.”

Quist declined to comment on the incident.

Gallatin County Sheriff Brian Gootkin announced the misdemeano­r assault charge shortly before midnight Wednesday in a written statement, about six hours after the incident.

Gianforte is due in court on or before June 7.

Gootkin said Jacobs’ injuries did not meet the legal definition of felony assault.

In Montana, assaults without a weapon are considered misdemeano­rs; assaults that cause serious physical injuries or involve weapons are treated as felonies.

Gootkin previously had contribute­d $250 to Gianforte’s campaign, according to elections records. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Amy Hanson and Colleen Slevin of The Associated Press and by David Weigel and Elise Viebeck of The Washington Post.

 ?? AP/Bozeman Daily Chronicle/RACHEL LEATHE ?? Gallatin County Sheriff Brian Gootkin answers questions Thursday at a Bozeman, Mont., news conference about Montana congressio­nal candidate Greg Gianforte’s misdemeano­r assault charge, which was filed after a reporter was roughed up Wednesday.
AP/Bozeman Daily Chronicle/RACHEL LEATHE Gallatin County Sheriff Brian Gootkin answers questions Thursday at a Bozeman, Mont., news conference about Montana congressio­nal candidate Greg Gianforte’s misdemeano­r assault charge, which was filed after a reporter was roughed up Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States