Houston Chronicle Sunday

Attack heightens angst as U.S. votes

Extremism, lies threaten midterms

- By Chris Megerian, Jonathan J. Cooper and Steve Peoples

WASHINGTON — An America that can already feel like it’s hurtling toward political disintegra­tion has been jolted yet again, this time by the violent attack on the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi less than two weeks before Election Day.

Seizing a hammer and leaving a trail of broken glass, an intruder broke into the couple’s San Francisco home early Friday and repeatedly struck Paul Pelosi, 82. He had surgery to repair a skull fracture and serious injuries to his right arm and hands, and his doctors expect a full recovery, the speaker’s office said.

The assailant confronted Paul Pelosi by shouting, “Where is Nancy,” according to a person familiar with the situation who was granted anonymity to discuss it. The Democratic congresswo­man was in Washington at the time. The calling out of her name was a sign that the assault could have targeted the lawmak

who as speaker is second in line to the presidency.

The ambush was a particular­ly savage reminder of the extremism that has coursed through American politics in recent years, adding to a sense of foreboding with the Nov. 8 election nearly at hand.

Armed watchers are staking out ballot drop boxes in Arizona to guard against false conspiraci­es about voter fraud. Threats against members of Congress have risen to historic levels. Public opinion surveys show fears for a fragile democracy and even of a civil war. Former President Donald Trump continues to deny that he lost the 2020 election to President Joe Biden, and his acolytes are attempting to consolidat­e their power over future elections.

A new domestic intelligen­ce assessment from the Homeland Security Department and other agencies said extremists fueled by election falsehoods “pose a heightened threat” to the upcoming midterms.

The assessment, dated Friday, said the greatest danger was “posed by lone offenders who leverage election-related issues to justify violence.”

“It is worse than it’s ever been,” said Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster. “This is uncharted waters.” Belcher blamed “the mainstream­ing of behavior in politics that was, once upon a time, left or right, abhorrent.”

Police have not identified a motive for the attack on Pelosi’s husband. Judging by social media posts, the suspect appears to have been stewing in a mix of conspiracy theories about elections and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“It’s bad regardless of the reasons, but if it’s politicall­y motivated, it’s just another example of political violence and irresponsi­bility of folks who are opening the door to that type of violence against other elected officials,” said Sen. Gary Peters of Michigan, chairman of the Senate Democrats’ campaign arm. “It’s a very sad time for our country right now.”

Politician­s from both parties expressed outrage about the assault.

“This attack is shocking, and Americans should worry because it is becoming more common,” said Joe O’Dea, a Republican candidate for Senate in Colorado. “Partisansh­ip and polarizati­on are tearing the country apart.”

Some responses, however, reflected a sharp sense of partisansh­ip.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin, RVa., worked the incident into his remarks at a campaign stop for a congressio­nal candidate as he called for Democrats to lose power in Congress.

“There’s no room for violence anywhere, but we’re going to send her back to be with him in California,” Youngkin said. “That’s what we’re going to go do.”

From the Civil War and attacks on Black voters during Jim Crow to the assassinat­ion of elected leaders such as John and Robert Kennedy, the United States has experience­d spasms of political violence. No party or ideology has a monopoly on it.

Five years ago, a lefter, wing activist opened fire on Republican­s as they practiced for an annual charity baseball game. Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana was critically wounded. In 2011, thenRep. Gabrielle Giffords, DAriz., was shot in the head at an event outside a Tucson grocery store.

Today, violent rhetoric and imagery have become a staple of right-wing politics in the U.S., and it escalated during Trump’s presidency. Democrats viewed the intrusion into Pelosi’s home as an extension of the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, when Trump’s supporters interrupte­d the peaceful transition of power to Biden.

On that day, rioters searched for Pelosi and chanted they wanted to hang then-Vice President Mike Pence, who had defied Trump’s demands to overturn election results.

Less than two years later, only 9 percent of U.S. adults think democracy is working “extremely well” or “very well,” according to this month’s poll from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Members of the House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack have received a steady stream of threats for their work.

“If we do not stop the big lie, perpetuate­d by those who seek to win at any cost, our democracy will cease to exist,” said Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va., who was assigned a security detail in recent months because of her work on the committee. “Then nothing else we do will have mattered.”

Nowhere has the temperatur­e been hotter than in Arizona, a cauldron for election conspiracy theories. People inspired by unsupporte­d claims that ballot drop boxes perpetuate election fraud have camped outside those boxes, photograph­ing voters and their license plates as they turn in ballots.

Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone said Monday that he is patrolling around drop boxes and devoting unpreceden­ted manpower to election security after two people armed with pistols and wearing tactical gear were seen keeping watch on a drop box outside Phoenix. The incident sparked fears of voter intimidati­on and the potential for confrontat­ions that could escalate into violence.

“It goes very quickly from well-intended to poorly executed, and then bad things happen,” Penzone said.

Penzone, a Democrat, said there’s “a growing toxic problem where individual­s feel that it is appropriat­e to use forms of intimidati­on and threats to try to influence political outcomes.”

Left-leaning groups have filed two lawsuits against groups organizing watch parties, including one with ties to the Oath Keepers militia. A federal judge declined Friday to order one group to stop its activities.

Earlier in the week, three men were convicted of supporting a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer after a trial that raised fears about paramilita­ry training and anti-government extremism.

And on Friday, a man pleaded guilty to threatenin­g to kill Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif. Also, a Kansas man is facing a felony charge for allegedly threatenin­g to kill one of the state’s congressme­n, Republican Jake LaTurner.

Rep. Val Demings, a Florida Democrat who is running for Senate, has campaigned with a large private security detail for much of the year.

It is a necessary precaution, she said, given an uptick in violent threats in the months since she served as a House manager in Trump’s first impeachmen­t trial. “I never thought that I would have my worst moment, feeling like I was really going to die, in the Capitol on Jan. 6,” said Demings, a former Orlando police chief.

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