The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Police tighten Congress security in era of increasing threats

-

WASHINGTON — The House’s chief law enforcemen­t officer is tightening security for traveling lawmakers as Congress reassesses safety in an era when threats against members were surging even before Donald Trump’s supporters attacked the Capitol.

Capitol Police officers will be stationed at Washington­area airports and the city’s Union Station train depot on busy travel days, the acting House sergeant at arms said in a memo obtained Friday. Timothy P. Blodgett said he’s set up an online portal so lawmakers can notify the agency about travel plans, and he urged them to coordinate trips with local police and airport officials and report suspicious activity to authoritie­s.

Capitol Police “will not be available for personal escorts,” said the email, sent late Thursday. “However, they will be in place to monitor as members move through the airport.”

The steps underscore­d political divisions that grew increasing­ly acrid, even potentiall­y dangerous, during Trump’s invective-filled four years as president. In addition to personal verbal attacks against perceived foes, Trump stirred up supporters with relentless streams of bogus conspiraci­es like his false charge that Democrats stole November’s election from him.

The animosity lawmakers face has spread among themselves, with numerous Democrats saying they are wary of GOP colleagues who’ve said they carry guns in Washington. Republican­s have bristled at new screening devices installed by House Speaker Nancy

Pelosi, D-Calif., that lawmakers are required to pass through when entering the House chamber, where carrying firearms is not allowed.

“The enemy is within the House of Representa­tives,” Pelosi told reporters this week in a chilling characteri­zation of Congress’ internal tensions. She cited “members of Congress who want to bring guns on the floor and have threatened violence on other members of Congress.”

In the latest instance of Capitol Hill’s spiraling personal hostility, Rep. Cori Bush, DMo., tweeted Friday that she was moving her office away from that of fellow freshman Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene,

R-Ga., “for my team’s safety.” Bush wrote that a maskless Greene and her staff “berated me in a hallway,” and wrote later that past Greene tweets have made her feel unsafe.

Greene responded with a tweet of her own, saying: “She is lying to you. She berated me.“Greene also called Bush, who is Black, “the leader of the St. Louis Black Lives Matter terrorist mob who trespassed into a gated neighborho­od to threaten the lives of the McCloskey’s.“

Last summer, Bush was among marchers at whom Mark and Patricia McCloskey waved guns after the protesters walked past their mansion in a private St. Louis neighborho­od.

The McCloskeys have pleaded not guilty to weapons and evidence tampering charges.

Bush is now one of Congress’ most progressiv­e members. She has sponsored a measure that could lead to expulsion for lawmakers who — like Greene — backed Trump’s unjustifie­d effort to reverse his November election defeat.

Greene has drawn fire from Democrats and some Republican­s for past social media posts reported by various news organizati­ons in which she’s suggested support for killing Democratic politician­s, unfounded QAnon theories and racist views.

 ?? Pool / Getty Images ?? Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visits National Guard troops deployed at the U.S. Capitol and its perimeter on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Friday. The Department of Homeland Security issued a bulletin on Wednesday warning of a continued threat from domestic extremists.
Pool / Getty Images Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visits National Guard troops deployed at the U.S. Capitol and its perimeter on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Friday. The Department of Homeland Security issued a bulletin on Wednesday warning of a continued threat from domestic extremists.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States