Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Attack on husband weighs on House Speaker’s future plans

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Monday the brutal attack on her husband will impact her decision on whether to remain in Congress after the midterm election, as she called on Republican­s to stop the misinforma­tion that is fuelling political violence and urged Americans to “vote to defend our democracy”.

In a wide-ranging CNN interview, the Democratic leader did not disclose her future plans if the party loses the House majority, as many believe Pelosi and others will step down.

Known for her stiff resolve, Pelosi’s voice cracked with emotion and she acknowledg­ed she was “close to tears” as she described the trauma of the attack on her 82-year-old husband and the sadness she felt for the country. “I’m sad because of my husband, but I’m also sad for our country.”

“I just want people to vote and we will respect the outcome of the election, and I would hope that the other side would do that as well,” she said.

Pelosi was speaking for the first time publicly on the eve of elections as the Democrats are struggling against a surge of Republican enthusiasm to keep control of Congress at a time of rising threats of violence against lawmakers and concerns over the US election.

Asked whether she had made a decision on whether or not to remain in Congress, Pelosi who rarely publicly discussed her future would only disclose that the attack on her husband had impacted her thinking.

“I have to say my decision will be affected about what happened in the last week or two,” Pelosi said on CNN.

Top Republican leaders, including allies of Donald Trump and even new Twitter-owner Elon Musk, have mocked and downplayed the attack, despite the gravity of the assault on her husband. “There has to be some message to the Republican­s to stop to stop the disinforma­tion,” she said. “We want the country to heal.”

Pelosi’s husband, Paul, was bludgeoned 11 days before the election by an intruder authoritie­s said broke into the family’s San Francisco and was looking for the speaker before striking him in the head with a hammer at least once.

The intruder told police he wanted to talk to Speaker Pelosi and would “break her kneecaps” as a lesson to other Democrats. Paul Pelosi suffered a fractured skull and other injuries in what authoritie­s said was an intentiona­l political attack. “For me this is the hard part because Paul was not the target, and he’s the one paying the price,” Pelosi said.

Pelosi said the hammer hit her husband in two places, but did not pierce his brain. Pelosi said his recovery was “on a good path” but she acknowledg­ed “it’s a long haul”. Long a target of Republican attacks, Pelosi said the assault on her husband of nearly 60 years, with its echoes of the January 6, 2021 insurrecti­on at the Capitol, was fuelled by misinforma­tion “that has no place in our democracy”.

 ?? AP ?? Voters wait in line to cast their ballots in the midterm elections in Rydal, Pennsylvan­ia, on Tuesday.
AP Voters wait in line to cast their ballots in the midterm elections in Rydal, Pennsylvan­ia, on Tuesday.
 ?? AP ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is escorted to a vehicle outside of her home in San Francisco, on Friday.
AP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is escorted to a vehicle outside of her home in San Francisco, on Friday.

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