The Palm Beach Post

Wounded but unbowed, Scalise makes return to House

- MARK WILSON / GETTY IMAGES

House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., reacts to a bipartisan standing ovation Thursday upon his return to the U.S. House for the first time since being shot in June at a congressio­nal baseball practice. “Our prayers have been answered,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan.

WASHINGTON — Walking gingerly and on two canes, Rep. Steve Scalise, the Republican whip, made an emotional return to the Capitol on Thursday, more than three months after a gunman nearly took his life during practice for a charity baseball game.

“It shows you if you fight and persevere, you can overcome anything,” Scalise told reporters as he entered the House chamber to thundering applause from his colleagues. He then delivered his first remarks on the House floor since the shooting on June 14.

Scalise said he wanted to “thank true angels across the way” — the Capitol Police officers who were wounded yet fired the shots that are credited with preventing the gunman from harming anyone else; a fellow lawmaker who rushed to his aid and applied a tourniquet to his wound; and his doctors, who were seated in the House gallery.

“You are my hero — you saved my life,” he told one of the officers, David Bailey. The other officer, Crystal Griner, was not present.

A man of deep Christian faith, Scalise repeatedly thanked God for his recovery, and he spoke of how he prayed during the chaotic, terrifying moments after the gunman had wounded him.

“One of the things I prayed for was that David and Crystal would be successful in carrying out their duties,” Scalise said, adding, “When I was laying there not long after the first shots were fired, I could hear a different caliber weapon. And that told me that they had immediatel­y engaged the shooter.”

The gunman died after a shootout with the police.

Scalise, 51, was grievously injured, and said he had undergone “many, many surgeries” and was learning to walk again. His office said he had spent the months since the shooting in an inpatient rehabilita­tion center, but that starting Thursday, he was back at work and undergoing outpatient therapy.

“I’m definitely a living example that miracles really do happen,” he told his colleagues.

The 15-minute speech, in a chamber packed with Republican­s and Democrats who repeatedly gave him standing ovations, marked the first time Scalise has spoken of his ordeal; he has also granted an interview to the CBS news show “60 Minutes,’’ which will air Sunday night. A crew from the network followed him in the Capitol on Thursday.

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 ??  ?? Rep. Steve Scalise has returned to work after being shot June 14.
Rep. Steve Scalise has returned to work after being shot June 14.

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