Santa Fe New Mexican

Gianforte apologizes to reporter after winning U.S. House election

Last-minute controvers­y unnerves Republican­s

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

BOZEMAN, Mont. — Republican multimilli­onaire Greg Gianforte won Montana’s only U.S. House seat on Thursday despite being charged a day earlier with assault after witnesses said he grabbed a reporter by the neck and threw him to the ground.

Gianforte, a technology entreprene­ur, defeated Democrat Rob Quist to continue the GOP’s stronghold on the congressio­nal seat. Democrats had hoped Quist, a musician and first-time candidate, could have capitalize­d on a wave of activism following President Donald Trump’s election.

Instead, the win reaffirmed Montana’s support for Trump’s young presidency in a conservati­ve-leaning state that voted overwhelmi­ngly for him in November.

Gianforte was a strong favorite throughout the campaign and that continued even after authoritie­s charged him with misdemeano­r assault on Wednesday. Witnesses said he grabbed Ben Jacobs, a reporter for The Guardian, and slammed him to the ground after being asked about the Republican health care bill.

Gianforte dropped out of sight after he was cited by police and ignored calls on Thursday by national Republican­s for him to apologize to the reporter.

He emerged only at his victory celebratio­n Thursday night, where he said he accepted responsibi­lity for the incident. “Last night I made a mistake and I took an action I can’t take back and I am not proud of what happened,” Gianforte told the crowd. “I should not have responded the way I did and for that I am sorry.”

The last-minute controvers­y unnerved Republican­s, who also faced close calls this year in the traditiona­lly Republican congressio­nal districts in Kansas and Georgia. A runoff election is scheduled for next month in Georgia between Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Karen Handel after Ossoff fell just short of winning outright.

Gianforte showed lukewarm support for Trump during his unsuccessf­ul run for governor in Montana last fall but did an about-face and turned into an ebullient Trump supporter after he started campaignin­g for the congressio­nal seat vacated by Republican Ryan Zinke, when he was tapped by Trump to serve as Interior Department secretary.

Gianforte urged Montana voters to send him to help Trump “drain the swamp,” brought in Vice President Mike Pence and first son Donald Trump Jr. to campaign for him and was supported by millions of dollars of ads and mailers paid for by Republican groups.

But the theme of the election shifted Wednesday night when Jacobs walked into Gianforte’s office as he was preparing for an interview with Fox News.

 ??  ?? Greg Gianforte
Greg Gianforte

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