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https://scmp.com/news/world/united-states-canada/article/2170638/donald-trump-and-republican-allies-reject-link
World/ United States & Canada

Donald Trump and Republican allies reject link to rhetoric and rise in violence

  • Trump faces calls to tone down his public statements
  • Debate comes after attempted pipe bombings and shooting at synagogue
Trump faces calls to tone down his public statements Debate comes after attempted pipe bombings and shooting at synagogue

Allies of US President Donald Trump rejected any link between harsh political rhetoric and a rise in violence in America, even as former president Barack Obama’s homeland security chief said changing the “toxic” political environment must start at the top.

The comments came after last week’s attempted pipe bombings and the mass murder at a Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday.

Deranged individuals infused with today’s uncivil political discourse think it’s their place to bring about change in society with assault weapons or bombs, and Americans listen to their leaders – including the president, said Jeh Johnson, the former secretary of homeland security.

“Our president has the largest microphone, he has the largest bullhorn,” Johnson said on ABC’s This Week on Sunday.
“This particular president has a particularly large voice and a large microphone, and Americans should demand that their leaders insist on change, a more civil discourse and a more civil environment generally.’’

The attack in Pittsburgh during Saturday services left 11 people dead, many of them elderly, in what’s being investigated as a hate crime.

On Friday, a Florida man known to have attended Trump campaign events was charged in connection with mailing at least 13 suspected explosive devices that targeted high-profile Democrats, including Obama.

That “should be a wake-up call to all Americans to demand change,” Johnson said.

Asked on Fox News Sunday whether Trump bears any responsibility for the recent incidents, Kirstjen Nielsen, the current secretary of Homeland Security, said the president “has made it extraordinarily clear that we will never allow political violence to take root in this country.”

Vice-President Mike Pence also rejected the notion that confrontational rhetoric by Trump, himself and other Republican leaders has created a spike in political violence.

“People on both sides of the aisle use strong language about our political differences, but I just don’t think you can connect it to threats or acts of violence,” Pence told NBC News in an in interview on Saturday.

But Matthew Dowd, a Republican consultant who was chief strategist for President George W. Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign, said the president needs to do more.

Trump is “not responsible” for recent violent acts by white supremacists, but he has “an obligation to try to rid us of much of this tribalism” and “he has not spoken in the right way in the course of this that it has diminished the hate,” Dowd said on ABC.

Former White House aide Anthony Scaramucci said there are problems on both sides of the political aisle but as the leader of the free world, Trump needs to “tone it down”.

Robert Bowers, the suspect of the attack at the Tree of Life synagogue. Photo: Handout
Robert Bowers, the suspect of the attack at the Tree of Life synagogue. Photo: Handout

“He’s the president of the United States,” Scaramucci said on CNN’s State of the Union Sunday.

“He controls the news cycle and the bully pulpit. And he could do it.”

Asked whether Trump’s raucous political rallies sow division in the country, Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan said “sometimes”.

“I worry about tribal identity politics becoming the new norm of how politics is waged,” Ryan, who’s retiring from Congress, said in a pre-recorded interview that aired on CBS’s Face the Nation on Sunday.

He called instead for a return to “inclusive, aspirational politics,” and asked whether Trump practices those politics, said, “Sometimes he does and sometimes he doesn’t.”

Trump condemned “all forms of evil” including anti-Semitism, in several rounds of comments to reporters and at two events on Saturday.

“We mourn for the unthinkable loss of life that took place today,” the president told a gathering of young farmers in Indianapolis, pledging the full resources of his administration to investigate the crime.”

Our nation and the world are shocked.”

Still, Trump, who held a relatively restrained campaign rally in Illinois on Saturday night, was back to mocking political opponents on Twitter Sunday.

He said liberal billionaire Tom Steyer, who’s waged a petition drive to impeach the president, is “wacky” and came off as a “crazed & stumbling lunatic” in a televised interview.

“It is unthinkable that in the midst of the horrible political violence our president would resort to name-calling instead of repairing the damage to the fabric of our country,” Steyer said in a tweet in response.

Steyer was among the Democrats who received crude pipe bombs in the mail last week. On CNN he blamed Trump for stoking “routine systematic lawlessness” across the political scene.

In the Jewish community specifically, there was a 34 per cent increase in acts of harassment, vandalism and violence in 2016 and that jumped to 57 per cent last year – the largest surge of anti-Semitic acts in the US ever, said Jonathan Greenblatt, national director of the Anti-Defamation League.

He said he was encouraged Trump said something Saturday, but it’s not enough.

“It isn’t what you say after the tragedy that only matters,” Greenblatt said on ABC.

“It’s the environment that you create with your rhetoric.’’

Meanwhile, a group of Pittsburgh Jewish leaders wrote an open letter to Trump Sunday telling him he bears responsibility for a deadly shooting at the synagogue in the city.

“For the past three years your words and your policies have emboldened a growing white nationalist movement. You yourself called the murderer evil, but yesterday’s violence is the direct culmination of your influence,” the open letter said.

It called on Trump to “fully denounce white nationalism,” to “stop targeting and endangering all minorities,” to “cease your assault on immigrants and refugees” and to “commit yourself to compassionate democratic policies that recognise the dignity of all of us.”

Until he does so, Trump – who has announced his intent to visit Pittsburgh – is not welcome in the city, the letter said.

Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse