The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Collins faces more criticism for RFK Jr. post

Jackson Republican posted quip about assassinat­ions.

- By Tia Mitchell Tia.Mitchell@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — A post on X by Georgia Congressma­n Mike Collins where he appeared to compare recent news about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to his father’s and uncle’s untimely deaths drew swift and widespread criticism Wednesday.

It was the second time in less than a week that a post on Collins’ feed on a social media site prompted a backlash. But it joins a growing list of problemati­c and controvers­ial posts by the Jackson Republican who is in his first term in the U.S. House.

The latest trouble for Collins came as he responded to reports by The New York Times about Kennedy’s testimony in a 2012 deposition about memory loss that he was experienci­ng. Kennedy said that a doctor told him scans showed the issue “was caused by a worm that got into my brain and ate a portion of it and then died.”

Kennedy is running for president as an independen­t, and he is largely considered to be drawing support away from former President Donald Trump. His campaign is built in part on Kennedy presenting himself as a younger and fresher voice in politics compared with Trump and President Joe Biden.

Collins, a Trump surrogate known for sarcastic and biting social media posts, laid into Kennedy with a crass reference.

“You either die a Kennedy with a hole in the brain or live long enough to become a Kennedy with a hole in the brain,” Collins wrote.

President John F. Kennedy was assassinat­ed in 1963 after a gunman shot him in his head and back while he rode in a motorcade in Dallas. Robert F. Kennedy Sr. was killed in Los Angeles five years later while campaignin­g for president. He was shot several times, including in the back of his head; the bullet left fragments in his brain.

Gun control activist Fred Guttenberg, whose son was killed in a 2018 shooting at a Parkland, Florida, high school, lobbed an expletive at Collins in response.

“This was not even close to funny,” Guttenberg wrote. “I guess to a demented person like you, this might seem like a normal thing to say. However, for the rest of us, just a reminder to VOTE for people who don’t joke about gun violence.”

A spokeswoma­n for Collins said the post is a reference to a line from the movie “Batman: The Dark Knight”: “You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain.”

The spokeswoma­n did not explain why Collins replaced the words in the quote with what appeared to be direct references to the deaths of the elder Kennedys.

Over the weekend Collins faced widespread rebukes, including from the Georgia NAACP, after sharing a video of counterpro­testers at the University of Mississipp­i shouting at a pro-Palestinia­n protester, a Black woman. One student in the video appeared to be making monkey sounds and gestures toward the woman.

On Monday, Collins released a statement acknowledg­ing the criticism and clarifying his objective in reposting the video.

 ?? AJC ?? U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, R-Jackson, drew rebukes after a comment about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his family.
AJC U.S. Rep. Mike Collins, R-Jackson, drew rebukes after a comment about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his family.

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