Los Angeles Times

Don’t attack her for speaking the truth

- ROBIN ABCARIAN

longservin­g Democratic House representa­tive from Los Angeles, was recently described by an MSNBC host as “the congresswo­man who never holds anything back.”

That was just after she gave voice to a sentiment that many of us on the blue side of the room have felt every time that Jim Jordan, the obstrepero­us Republican congressma­n from Ohio, speaks: “You need to respect the chair and shut your mouth,” Waters told Jordan as he badgered infectious diseases expert Dr. Anthony Fauci during a committee hearing last week. Amen, sister. Let me just say this up front: I’m a fan of Waters, 82, who has reached a point after three decades in Congress where she simply doesn’t care what her critics think of her. Assuming she ever did. Over the weekend, Waters was in Minnesota to attend a protest against the police violence that had just claimed the life of yet another unarmed Black man, 20-year-old Daunte Wright. And she riled her critics once again.

“We’ve got to stay on the street and we’ve got to get more active, we’ve got to get more confrontat­ional,” she said. “We’ve got to make sure that they know that we mean business.”

Was she implying there would be violence in the event that the jury failed to convict former Minneapoli­s Police Officer Derek Chauvin in the killing of George Floyd? Was her remark the equivalent or worse of former President Trump urging his supporters to march to the Capitol and “fight like hell”? That’s what her antagonist­s decided. “It is hard to imagine anything more inappropri­ate than a member of Congress flying in from California to inform local leaders not so subtly that this defendant better be found guilty or else there will be big trouble in the streets,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

On Tuesday, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy introduced a motion to censure Waters, which was promptly voted down along party lines, 216-210.

Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who just abandoned plans for a white supremacis­t caucus in Congress, vowed to introduce a resolution to expel Waters from the House. (As my colleague Jennifer Haberkorn noted, Greene, a farright conspiracy theorist, was stripped of committee assignment­s for social media posts made before she took office, “including an endorsemen­t of killing Democrats.”)

Chauvin’s defense attorney moved for a mistrial based on Waters’ remarks. The judge denied the motion, but not before calling out Waters by name, describing her statement as “abhorrent” and saying it might provide the defense with grounds for appeal, which legal experts dismissed as unlikely.

But leave it to Tucker Carlson of Fox News to respond with calculated hysteria and his own incitement to violence: “Maxine Waters showed up to demand more violence,” said Carlson. “Do what we say or we will kill you.” As usual, Waters wasn’t having it. “I talk about confrontin­g the justice system, confrontin­g the policing that’s going on,” she said Monday. “I’m talking about speaking up. I’m talking about legislatio­n. I’m talking about elected officials doing what needs to be done to control their budgets and to pass legislatio­n.”

Getting into a comparison of how Republican­s ignored the many provocatio­ns to violence that spewed from former President Trump’s mouth over his four years in office is probably futile.

Let’s just say the attacks on Waters are mostly political, and stink of racial bias. She embodies the rage that so many of us feel, and she is not afraid to express it. And her constituen­ts clearly support her outspokenn­ess. She routinely gets more than 70% of the vote in the 43rd district, which is half Latino, 19% Black, 15% white and 13% Asian American and Pacific Islander.

In 2018, she called on Americans to confront the Trump administra­tion officials who carried out and defended his inhumane policy of separating families at the border, and supported booing them out of restaurant­s. “If we can’t protect the children,” she said then, “we can’t protect anyone.”

She was accused in many quarters of incivility, but as Seth Rogen tweeted at the time, “I’m confused that some people think civility is comparable to humanity.”

Hours before the verdict came down, even President Biden expressed an opinion about the Chauvin murder trial, after phoning the family of George Floyd to offer support: “I am praying the verdict is the right verdict, which is, I think it’s overwhelmi­ng in my view.” (He added: “I wouldn’t say that unless the jury was sequestere­d now.”)

Should he have weighed in? Maybe not, but he expressed what so many Americans have been feeling — that Chauvin murdered Floyd in an unspeakabl­e manner, by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes. And, thank God, the jury agreed, finding Chauvin guilty on two counts of murder and one count of manslaught­er.

Trying to put the focus on Maxine Waters was a classic feat of Republican misdirecti­on, a convenient distractio­n from one of the most profound and depressing issues confrontin­g this country: the ongoing brutalizat­ion of Black people by law enforcemen­t.

And yet, many Americans do not see a connection between systemic racism and these killings. Last June, the Public Religion Research Institute polled Americans on their perception­s of police killings of Black Americans. Seventy-eight percent of Republican­s, and 72% of white evangelica­l Protestant­s, saw them as isolated events, rather than part of a pattern. Only 17% of Democrats saw them as isolated events.

“The denial that systemic racism exists is one of the absolute glues that holds together the modern Republican coalition,” CNN political analyst Ron Brownstein told Anderson Cooper on Monday night.

That — and not anything Maxine Waters has said — is what we need to be worked up about.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? REP. MAXINE WATERS is a favorite target of the Republican Party.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press REP. MAXINE WATERS is a favorite target of the Republican Party.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States