Santa Cruz Sentinel

Victims in 2011 Giffords attack see parallel to Capitol riot

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX >> As a pro-Trump mob laid siege to the U. S. Capitol this week, former Rep. Gabby Giffords could only wait nervously for news about her husband, Mark Kelly, who was barely a month into his job as a senator from Arizona.

A decade earlier it was Kelly enduring the excruciati­ng wait for news about Giffords, who was shot in the head in an attempted assassinat­ion that, like Wednesday’s siege, shocked the nation and prompted a reckoning about the state of politics and discourse in the United States.

For some who survived the attack 10 years ago Friday, the violence inside the U. S. Capitol this week was a painful reminder of that day, when a gunman with paranoid schizophre­nia killed six and injured 12, in addition to Giffords, who was meeting with constituen­ts in a grocery store parking lot in Tucson.

“It oftentimes gets forgotten because we are in a heightened and really vitriolic place in politics — every single one of those people, whether they were a staffer, security guard, member, is a human being,” said Daniel Hernandez, the Giffords intern who was credited with saving her life when he put pressure on her bleeding head wound while waiting for paramedics.

The storming of the Capitol “was a stark reminder that at any moment we could go from having a congressio­nal event that we all think is held to a different standard, and yet in five minutes we had people on the (Senate) floor, people in Nancy Pelosi’s office,” said Hernandez, who is now a Democratic state lawmaker representi­ng part of Tucson in the Arizona Legislatur­e.

The county commemorat­ed the 10-year anniversar­y Friday and dedicated a memorial to those slain and injured.

The shooting of Giffords, her staff and the constituen­ts who arrived to speak to their congresswo­man rattled the nation in the aftermath of the bitter and contentiou­s 2010 election, which saw the tea party movement sweep Democrats from office around the country. Giffords had barely retained her seat.

It prompted an extraordin­ary show of unity. At President Barack Obama’s state of the union address a little more than two weeks later, Republican­s and Democrats sat side by side instead of clustering on opposite sides of the chamber.

It was short-lived. The country is more polarized than ever. Congress was threatened.

Kelly was in the Senate chamber on Wednesday when the mob breached the Capitol, and he was escorted to a safe location, his spokesman, Jacob Peters, said.

“As I sat waiting for informatio­n about @SenMarkKel­ly’s safety today, I couldn’t stop thinking about what you must have gone through 10 years ago this week,” Giffords wrote on Twitter Wednesday after it was clear lawmakers were unharmed. “I’m so glad you and your staff are safe. I love you, sweetie.”

The shooting a decade ago left Giffords with limited motion on one side and aphasia, a verbal disability. She can think clearly but struggles to form the words and sentences to express her thoughts. Still, with significan­t help from her speech therapist, she’s advanced considerab­ly since the early days of her recovery, when she could say just one word: chicken.

The nation glimpsed her progress at the Democratic National Convention in August, when she delivered a poignant 90-second speech in support of President- elect Joe Biden, her longest public speech since the shooting. She regularly gave brief remarks to introduce her husband at key moments in his 2020 campaign.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Jan. 5, 2011 file photo, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., takes part in a reenactmen­t of her swearing-in, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Jan. 5, 2011 file photo, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., takes part in a reenactmen­t of her swearing-in, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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