The Oklahoman

Shoving his way to Congress

- WASHINGTON Kathleen Parker kathleenpa­rker@ washpost.com WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

The shocking thing about Greg Gianforte’s assault on a journalist isn’t that he bodyslamme­d and punched a reporter but that it took so long for the inevitable to occur.

Such an attack was foreshadow­ed way back in March last year when tough-guy Corey Lewandowsk­i grabbed a female reporter who, apparently, was too brash for the tender sensibilit­ies of then-candidate Donald Trump’s inner circle.

A few months after his effrontery, Lewandowsk­i left the campaign and joined CNN as a commentato­r. He now may be poised to rejoin Team Trump.

Gianforte, a Montana Republican, also was rewarded for his imitation of a distempere­d jackal. His campaign in a special congressio­nal election reportedly reaped more than $100,000 in online donations just before the vote, most of it in the aftermath of the incident. The Bozeman businessma­n also managed to win the election.

As captured in an audio recording, The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs is heard saying, “You just bodyslamme­d me and broke my glasses.” Then, according to Fox News reporter Alicia Acuna, Gianforte climbed on top of Jacobs and began punching him, saying, something like, “I’m sick and tired of this.” Aren’t we all. The cause of his violent meltdown? Jacobs had asked Gianforte a few questions about his position on health care.

This isn’t exactly high-handed heckling over a sensitive issue. What if it had been? Would Gianforte have throttled him? Gianforte did apologize for his actions after the election results were in and following 24 hours of denial.

It would seem that Gianforte, who has been charged with misdemeano­r assault, is unfamiliar with the media beast known as a scrum, an impromptu assemblage of reporters, usually following an event, during which reporters fire off questions and jostle each other for a better position — sort of the way Trump bulldozed past Montenegro Prime Minister Dusko Markovic this past Thursday.

In Brussels for a NATO summit, apparently stricken by an urgent need to reach center stage for a group photo, the U.S. president literally pushed Markovic out of the way. Upon finding his preferred spot, Trump adjusted his tie and seemed oblivious to what the rest of the world observed as profoundly unseemly.

Markovic graciously has said he didn’t notice the shove, adding that the U.S. president should be in the front row. Perhaps so, but a light tap on the shoulder and at least a pretense of manners in the form of, “Excuse me,” wouldn’t have been such a strain.

While Trump’s reflexive rudeness was merely embarrassi­ng, Gianforte’s attack was frightenin­g. Both actions, however, flow from the same spout —our ever-coarsening culture and partisan hostility that erased all boundaries of civility during the 2016 election. It would be unfair to pin this evolution on Trump alone, but broadening acceptance of bullying tactics undoubtedl­y has been aided by the commander in chief’s own embrace, even celebratio­n, of resolving difference­s by force, if necessary.

Recall candidate Trump encouragin­g his supporters to boo journalist­s at his rallies; his promising to pay legal expenses for a guy who punched a heckler; and his incessant demonizing of the mainstream media as “fake news,” meaning news he doesn’t like.

Gianforte may be a hero to some, but his violent antics should send a chill up the spines of Constituti­on-minded Americans. Trump’s rhetoric has normalized hatred of journalist­s and, by implicatio­n, encouraged the sort of behavior we’ve now witnessed. The perpetrato­r wasn’t some rightwing crazy from Bumduck; he was a respected businessma­n, now elected to Congress.

If this doesn’t worry you, we have bigger problems than Russia could ever dream.

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