The Arizona Republic

Mesa mayor faces vitriol

After a town hall, Giles called Trump ‘an idiot’

- Lily Altavena Arizona Republic

The subject line? “Dear Mayor Dumbass.” The contents of the email message: a prayer that the mayor of Mesa, John Giles, dies a slow, painful death from testicular cancer.

Giles drew the vitriolic response from some corners of the Internet after appearing to call President Donald Trump an “idiot.” A local TV station caught him on a hot mic while he was talking with U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake after a town hall on Nov. 17.

The situation reflects what one expert says is a coarsening of civic discourse that increasing­ly concerns many Americans.

By Monday, a public-records search by The Arizona Republic found at least 41 emails to Giles in response to the incident. The vast majority are critical.

He has also received 18 voice mails on the issue, all negative, according to a spokeswoma­n.

Giles’ social-media accounts also lit up. At least one tweet was peppered with the snake emoji that similarly plagued singer Taylor Swift online after her feud with Kanye West and Kim Kardashian escalated.

Others have called the mayor, who leads a city once ranked as the most conservati­ve in the United States, a “traitor” to the Republican Party.

One person wrote to Giles, “Get out, you are a disgrace.” Many said they would not vote for Giles again or would try to vote him out. The mayor’s term ends in 2020.

A statement from the mayor reads in part:

“My words, while regrettabl­y informal and imprecise during a private conversati­on, were a manifestat­ion of my frustratio­n and concern with national politics. I want to apologize to those who might have misinterpr­eted my comments as being critical or dismissive of the intelligen­ce of the voters who elected both me and the President.”

Trump tweeted about the incident, although he directed his ire at Flake.

Carolyn Lukensmeye­r, who heads the University of Arizona’s National Institute for Civil Discourse, said the ideologica­l divide and breakdown in civil discourse in the nation began in political circles but has spread.

“It’s now like a virus that’s infected the public,” she said.

The reaction Giles faces is symptomati­c of a “personal” and “attacking” dialogue that began during the 2016 election, Lukensmeye­r said. But Lukensmeye­r said Giles sparked the backlash by using the word “idiot.”

“The example you’re giving (the hotmic comments) is very egregious on the mayor’s part and then equally egregious on the people who responded to the mayor in the way that they did,” Lukensmeye­r said. “Elected officials hold the public trust. And they really do have to hold themselves — and we should hold them — to a higher standard.”

She says the institute hears a lot of concern from the public over what she calls a “degradatio­n” of the political discourse.

The coarsening of discourse also presents challenges at the Thanksgivi­ng dinner table. As the holiday season barrels forward, more Americans — about 58 percent — are dreading the moment when the conversati­on turns to politics, according to a new NPR/PBS Newshour/ Marist poll.

There are solutions for a national political discourse gone off the rails, according to Lukensmeye­r. The National Institute of Civil Discourse was establishe­d after the 2011 shooting of thenU.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords near Tucson. Now, the institute is working on a campaign called Revive Civility.

“People are just reacting quickly rather than taking a breath, pausing, thinking of the context they’re in,” Lukensmeye­r said.

Giles’ full statement reads: My words, while regrettabl­y informal and imprecise during a private conversati­on, were a manifestat­ion of my frustratio­n and concern with national politics. I want to apologize to those who might have misinterpr­eted my comments as being critical or dismissive of the intelligen­ce of the voters who elected both me and the President. Much of the feed back I have received has come from people outside of Mesa and usually Arizona. I hope Mesa residents will look at my history and recognize that I will always put their interests ahead of partisan politics as I work to strengthen our city.

 ?? DAVID KADLUBOWSK­I/THE REPUBLIC ?? Mesa Mayor John Giles
DAVID KADLUBOWSK­I/THE REPUBLIC Mesa Mayor John Giles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States