The Mercury News

Must-see video for House Republican leaders

- By Martin Schram Martin Schram is a Tribune News Service columnist. © 2021 Tribune Content Agency.

This past Wednesday, we got perhaps the most disappoint­ing answer yet to a question that I have been asking myself for most of my journalist­ic career.

It happened as we watched the House’s dueling speeches and censure of the unrepentan­t Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., for having tweeted an anime video of himself as a cartoonish superhero fatally stabbing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and swinging two swords at President Joe Biden.

Yet, watching that angry ritual, I found myself thinking back to a remarkable and uplifting moment in that same chamber four years earlier. It occurred as a result of a tragically real congressio­nal assassinat­ion attempt. But it left us with a very different perception of how House Republican leaders used to see their responsibi­lity as coinciding with old-fashioned American patriotism.

FLASHBACK >> to 10:55 a.m. on Sept. 28, 2017: As aides open the massive House chamber door, more than 400 representa­tives jump to their feet and begin clapping and cheering as one. You can’t tell the Democrats from the Republican­s. A solidly built man enters, walking very slowly but surely, using two canes for support, now that he has learned to walk again. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., then House Majority Whip, is returning to work. More than three months earlier, he was horribly wounded by a Trumphatin­g assassin who sprayed bullets randomly at Republican­s at a baseball field, as they practiced for their annual game with the Democrats. At the microphone, Scalise speaks of “the outpouring of love from you, my colleagues, both Republican and Democrat.” Congress is famous for its political battle, he says, “but ultimately we come together. … It’s so important that as we have those political battles, we don’t make them personal.” FAST FORWARD >> to this past week. The scene we saw on our news screens was nothing like that moment four years ago that was filled with happy hearts, moist eyes and not a trace of red or blue politics. What we saw and felt this past week was the reality of Congress 2021 — a place where hearts are cold and eyes are glaring. Especially on the Republican side, where Gosar just did everything his party’s now Minority Whip seemed to abhor on that 2017 day.

There’s a reason I’m focusing on this topic. I have ended up covering most of the shattering assassinat­ions and near misses of the last half century:

• 1968: the assassinat­ions of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy.

• 1972: the paralyzing near assassinat­ion of George Wallace.

• 1975: two failed assassinat­ions of Gerald Ford; a frightenin­g faux assassinat­ion when a man pointed a blank-shooting starter’s pistol at Ronald Reagan.

• 1981: the assassinat­ion attempt that almost killed Reagan and severely wounded my friend and his press secretary, Jim Brady.

I came away from chroniclin­g all of that wondering what really motivated those warped minds to commit their godawful crimes. Were they triggered by some thoughtles­s thing said or done by someone they admire?

The last time a representa­tive was censured, a decade ago, most Democrats joined in censuring one of their most popular colleagues, Rep. Charlie Rangel, D-N.Y. Because it was the right thing to do. Last Wednesday, all but two Republican­s voted against censuring Gosar.

And that brings us back to Scalise. The leader I respected when he grasped all the core principles in 2017 unfortunat­ely chose to be morally MIA on Wednesday. In 2017, Scalise told the House that world leaders who had called him after the attempted assassinat­ions “saw this as an attack on the institutio­n of the United States Congress and our government.”

The GOP House whip who gave Gosar a pass last Wednesday got his thankyou the next day: Gosar retweeted the violent video anime in which he kills the House liberal he most loves to hate — and swings swords aimed at killing America’s president. But if Scalise is up for a video, I have a far more worthwhile alternativ­e:

Check out a speech given by a once-principled and very grateful House leader, right after he walked into the House chamber at 10:55 a.m. on Sept. 28, 2017, and began his second chance at life and service.

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