Albuquerque Journal

It can be done

The shooting attack on U.S. congressme­n should tell us it’s past time to end divisive invective and start working together

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The partisan rancor and toxic incivility that have gripped the nation since last year’s campaign that ended with President Donald Trump’s election win spilled over into bloodshed Wednesday when 66-year-old James T. Hodgkinson opened fire on a group of Republican Congressma­n practicing for a fundraisin­g baseball game against their Democrat colleagues.

Although Tim Slater, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Washington field office, stopped short of calling the shootings an assassinat­ion attempt, that’s exactly what it was. Hodgkinson, an avowed progressiv­e and Trump hater, was out to inflict heavy damage on the nation’s Republican leadership.

Luckily fate stepped in. House majority whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana, who has a security detail, happened to be at the practice. It was the two members of his detail who engaged Hodgkinson in a shootout, while congressme­n and spectators scrambled for cover. Without those two armed guards, the carnage would almost certainly have been far worse.

And Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, told the Texas Tribune on Thursday, “On any other given day, our pitchers would have been throwing in the bullpen right where the shooter appeared. They would have been trapped.” Instead, they were all resting up for Thursday’s game.

Still, before Hodgkinson was killed at the conclusion of a harrowing 10-minute gun battle with Capitol Police officers Crystal Griner and David Bailey, he managed to wound five people — as well as the nation’s shaky sense of well-being.

Investigat­ors say Hodgkinson was an unemployed home inspector from Belleville, Ill., a suburb of St. Louis. He had reportedly been living in a van in Alexandria for the past few months. He was an active supporter of unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders, and his Facebook page contained many anti-Trump messages.

Just prior to the shootings, Hodgkinson reportedly asked Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina, who had just left the practice, whether those still on the field were Democrats or Republican­s. After Duncan said they were Republican­s, Hodgkinson thanked him and walked away — apparently to get his semi-automatic rifle.

Based on what’s known so far, it appears that Hodgkinson is an extreme example of the deep divisions affecting our nation today. The vicious rhetoric fostered by Republican­s who hated all things Obama and Democrats who view Trump as nothing short of the Antichrist — echoed, amplified and dispersed worldwide by social media — breeds the type of hatred Hodgkinson delivered via bullets across a baseball field on a beautiful summer morning.

Neither side is blameless here. Trump’s bizarre Tweet storms and undiscipli­ned speech — reported 24/7 by the media — fuels the fire that consumes people like Hodgkinson. Democrats, seemingly hell bent on bringing down the most irksome president in recent history, fan the flames.

And, yes, there is the news media. At a time we should try to be healing, the New York Times weighed in with an editorial blaming conservati­ve rhetoric based on a claim that a Sarah Palin campaign effort was responsibl­e for the shooting of then-Congresswo­man Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona. But it has long since been proven that the shooter was an apolitical, degranged psychotic who knew nothing of Palin’s targeting of certain congressio­nal districts on a map with crosshairs.

While the Times published a weak correction, such shoddy reporting only buttresses the divisions that include claims of media bias.

How much more of this can America take? On Wednesday, we were lucky more were not felled by one angry man’s bullets. Is this the event that will finally bring us to our senses?

Immediatel­y after Wednesday’s shooting, some Congressme­n and women reached across the aisle, seeking at least temporary unity. That’s a good sign.

It’s time to tamp down the rhetoric. On all sides. It’s time for each of us to stop contributi­ng to the invective that is dividing our country, and to make it clear to our elected officials that they must do the same.

It can be done. At a recent forum sponsored by Greater Albuquerqu­e Chamber, New Mexico’s three members of Congress, Michelle Lujan Grisham, Ben Ray Luján and Steve Pearce, were absolutely civil, respectful and profession­al — even as they staked out very different positions.

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