The Columbus Dispatch

Democrats stirred up fair share of political vitriol

- Marc A. Thiessen writes a column for The Washington Post on foreign and domestic policy. syndicatio­n@washpost.com

for the recent spate of mail-bomb attacks and the massacre at a Pittsburgh synagogue. The truth is they ceded the moral high ground years ago. Our descent into vitriol began long before Trump — and Democrats and their allies are as culpable as the president.

Recall that in 2000, the NAACP spent millions on ugly ads accusing George W. Bush of moral equivalenc­e with white supremacis­ts who brutally lynched James Byrd in 1998. "My father was ... beaten, chained, and then dragged three miles to his death, all because he was black," said Byrd's daughter, as the screen flashed grainy images of a chain dragging a body behind a pickup truck. "So, when Governor George W. Bush refused to support hate-crime legislatio­n, it was like my father was killed all over again."

Barack Obama set the tone for his 2008 campaign against John McCain when he declared, "If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun." Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., answered that call when he compared McCain to segregatio­nist Alabama Gov. George Wallace and declared that McCain was replicatin­g the climate of "hatred and division" that led to attacks on civil-rights workers. Four years later, a pro-Obama superPAC ran ads showing GOP vice-presidenti­al nominee Paul Ryan pushing an old lady in a wheelchair over the side of a cliff, while another ran false ads blaming Mitt Romney for a woman's death from cancer.

During the 2016 campaign, Hillary Clinton compared Republican­s to Nazis, saying in regard to illegal immigrants they wanted to "round them up" and put them in "boxcars." She also compared the GOP to terrorists, declaring, "Now, extreme views on women, we expect that from some of the terrorist groups, we expect that from people who don't want to live in the modern world, but it's a little hard to take from Republican­s."

And she listed Republican­s alongside the Iranians among the "enemies" she was most proud of making.

When Trump took office, Democrats abandoned their role as the "opposition" and declared themselves "the resistance." Look up "resistance" in the Oxford dictionary and you'll see the definition "the use of force or violence to oppose someone or something." William E. Scheuerman, professor of political science at Indiana University, notes the word resistance "first surfaces in debates about tyrannicid­e, the violent removal from power of misbehavin­g kings who usurp authority not properly belonging to them."

Scalise would have been forgiven for pointing out that his would-be assassin took Democrats' calls to "resistance" literally.

More recently, some Democrats were peddling unfounded accusation­s that Brett Kavanaugh participat­ed in gang rapes in an effort to destroy the Supreme Court nominee. Clinton defended smashmouth tactics, declaring that "you cannot be civil with a political party that wants to destroy what you stand for."

None of this excuses Trump's rhetoric, but it does make his Democratic accusers hypocrites. When you traffic for decades in hateful, violent political rhetoric, you have lost the moral authority to effectivel­y condemn others for doing so.

Indeed, Democrats arguably bear much of the blame for creating Trump. One of the reasons voters rallied behind Trump is precisely because, after years of seeing their standard-bearers act like punching bags, Trump presented himself as a counterpun­cher who isn't afraid to fight back and gives as good as he gets.

The results are ugly. Trump is wrong to call the media the "enemy of the people" and to celebrate a congressma­n body-slamming a reporter, and the host of other terrible things he has said. But Democrats were dragging us into the political gutter long before Trump came along.

If they think Americans elected a Frankenste­in's monster, they are Dr. Frankenste­in.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States