The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

One man can take us back from the brink: Stop the mob, Mr. President

- Dana Milbank Columnist

What hath Trump wrought? Rep. Greg Gianforte, R-Mont., last year pleaded guilty to assaulting a journalist. President Trump last week celebrated the assault.

“Any guy that can do a body slam, he’s my kind of — he’s my guy,” Trump said to cheers.

CNN’s Jim Acosta said one man at the rally then looked at him “and ran his thumb across his throat.”

Wednesday morning, a pipe bomb arrived at CNN’s offices in New York, addressed to former CIA director and current Trump critic John Brennan. Other bombs went to at least five others frequently villainize­d by Trump: Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, former attorney general Eric Holder, Rep. Maxine Waters and, earlier this week, Democratic financier George Soros.

Trump appropriat­ely denounced “acts or threats of political violence of any kind.” But it’s fair to ask: If a person who assaults a journalist is Trump’s “guy,” might not some unstable person think that, by sending a pipe bomb to a news organizati­on, he, too, is being Trump’s guy?

Nobody but the perpetrato­r is responsibl­e for this attack. And there is plenty of regrettabl­e behavior on both sides. But one man has done the most to create this climate, whipping supporters to fear and desperatio­n with often violent rhetoric. And only one man can take us back from the brink. Stop the mob, Mr. President.

In the closing days of the 2018 campaign, Trump has revived what worked in 2016, encouragin­g his mostly white and mostly male supporters to feel besieged by dark-skinned people, immigrants, women, religious minorities and, of course, the media.

Trump recently maligned all the targets of Wednesday’s attack. Thirty-six hours earlier, Trump fired up yet more “Lock her up!” and “CNN sucks!” chants. After Holder said “when they go low, we kick them,” Trump threatened: “He’d better be careful what he’s wishing for.”

Trump has turned partisan divisions into a proxy war over race and gender, stoking backlash to the first black president and the first woman to be a major party’s presidenti­al nominee.

Those receiving the pipe bombs include three AfricanAme­ricans, two women and a Jew frequently targeted by antiSemite­s.

Trump’s latest stump speech portrays these Democrats as violent, lawless and inhuman, responsibl­e for “an assault” on the country, an “angry left-wing mob” on a “ruthless mission to … demolish and destroy,” “corrupt power-hungry globalists” who are “not caring about our country” and “want to replace freedom with socialism” and invite people into the country who “carve you up with a knife.”

Democrats are “openly encouragin­g millions of illegal aliens to … overwhelm our nation” and have “launched an assault on the sovereignt­y of our country … and the safety of every single American.”

Is it any wonder people might feel desperate?

Clinton was wrong to say recently that “civility can start again” only if Democrats win. Also wrong: Holder’s “kick them” remark, Waters’ call to harass Cabinet officials, and loudmouths who hound Ted Cruz and others in restaurant­s. Violence by the left, whether by antifa hooligans or the shooting at a Republican baseball practice, is as evil as violence by the right.

But one public figure has the biggest megaphone. He encouraged supporters to “knock the crap out of” protesters and offered to pay attackers’ legal bills.

This has an effect. A man was arrested for threatenin­g to shoot Boston Globe employees this summer, calling the paper the “enemy of the people.”

After the bombs were discovered Wednesday, Trump offered a soothing message: “We have to unify. We have to come together.”

Amen. But at Monday’s rally, Trump ridiculed almost those exact words, mocking Clinton’s campaign for having “some stupid slogan like ‘stay together.’”

Actually, it was “Stronger Together.” If only our president believed that.

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