Las Vegas Review-Journal

Republican candidates say rhetoric not a factor

Planned Parenthood official says talk ‘breeds acts of violence’

- By Jose A. DelReal

Several Republican presidenti­al candidates on Sunday condemned the attack on a Planned Parenthood facility in Colorado Springs but stopped short of agreeing with liberal critics who say that fiery antiaborti­on rhetoric contribute­d to the shooting.

“It’s obviously a tragedy. Nothing justifies this,” former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina said on “Fox News Sunday.” “Any protesters should always be peaceful. Whether it’s Black Lives Matter or pro-life protesters.”

Calls to defund Planned Parenthood through congressio­nal action have escalated in recent months amid a protracted national debate about the ethics of collecting fetal tissue for research.

That dialogue was cast in a grim light after reports that the suspected Colorado gunman is said to have used the phrase “no more baby parts’’ while discussing his motives for Friday’s attack, as reported Saturday by The Washington Post. The attack has been linked to escalating rhetoric on the right by liberal critics of antiaborti­on activism such as Vicki Cowart, president of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, and Dawn Laguens, executive vice president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

“We’ve seen an alarming increase in hateful rhetoric and smear campaigns against abortion providers and patients over the last few months,” Cowart said in a statement. “That environmen­t breeds acts of violence.”

“It is offensive and outrageous that some politician­s are now claiming this tragedy has nothing to do with the toxic environmen­t they helped create,” Laguens said in a statement on Sunday. “One of the lessons of this awful tragedy is that words matter, and hateful rhetoric fuels violence. It’s not enough to denounce the tragedy without also denouncing the poisonous rhetoric that fueled it.”

Fiorina rejected such comments, calling them “typical left-wing tactics.”

“This is so typical of the left to immediatel­y begin demonizing a messenger because they don’t agree with the message,” she said. “The vast majority of Americans agree what Planned Parenthood is doing is wrong.”

Fiorina took a particular­ly hard line against Planned Parenthood during the second Republican presidenti­al debate, held in September. In one instance, she described “a fully formed fetus on the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking while someone says we have to keep it alive to harvest its brain.”

That characteri­zation struck an emotional chord with voters but was ultimately proven to be an inaccurate representa­tion. Though no video showing what she described was found to exist, Fiorina has held that her depiction was accurate.

Business mogul Donald Trump called the alleged Colorado shooter a “sick person” in an interview on Sunday with NBC’s Chuck Todd on “Meet the Press.”

“Well, this was an extremist. And this was a man who they said prior to this was mentally disturbed,” Trump said, according to an early transcript of the interview. “So, he’s a mentally disturbed person. There’s no question about that.

“I will tell you, there is a tremendous group of people that think it’s terrible, all of the videos that they’ve seen with some of these people from Planned Parenthood talking about it like you’re selling parts to a car,” he said. “I mean, there are a lot of people that are very unhappy about that.”

Retired pediatric neurosurge­on Ben Carson called the shooting the work of “extremism.”

“Unfortunat­ely, there’s a lot of extremism coming from all areas. It’s one of the biggest problems that I think is threatenin­g to tear our country apart,” Carson said on ABC’s “This Week” with George Stephanopo­ulos, according to a transcript of the exchange. “We get into our separate corners and we hate each other, we want to destroy those with whom we disagree.”

Carson did not directly address antiaborti­on rhetoric but did warn of increasing political divisions in the country.

“If we can get rid of the rhetoric from either side and actually talk about the facts, I think that’s when we begin to make progress,” he said. “And, you know, a lot of people, when they don’t have facts, when they don’t have a good backup, that’s when the rhetoric starts. That’s when the name-calling starts.”

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee expressed similar dismay at the attack and added that the gunman’s actions in fact stood against the principles held by antiaborti­on activists.

“Regardless of why he did it, what he did is domestic terrorism,” Huckabee said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “What he is did is absolutely abominable, especially to those of us in the pro-life movement, because there’s nothing about any of us that would condone or in any way look the other way at something like this.”

 ?? BRIAN C. FRANK/REUTERS FILE ?? Carly Fiorina said Sunday that “nothing justifies” the shooting Friday at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado, but rejected the idea that antiaborti­on rhetoric contribute­d to the attack. She said such claims are “typical left-wing tactics.”
BRIAN C. FRANK/REUTERS FILE Carly Fiorina said Sunday that “nothing justifies” the shooting Friday at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado, but rejected the idea that antiaborti­on rhetoric contribute­d to the attack. She said such claims are “typical left-wing tactics.”

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