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A Physical Attack on a Member of Congress Is an Attack on the Voter, Democracy, and the Constitution

1/29/2026

 
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U.S. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar speaking with supporters of U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders at a town hall hosted by Frontline Communities of Nevada at the SEIU Nevada office in Las Vegas, Nevada. PHOTO CREDIT: Gage Skidmore
​Within the last week, two Members of Congress were physically assaulted in public settings – grim reminders that political violence in America is no longer hypothetical.

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) was physically attacked on Tuesday during a town hall meeting by a man who used a syringe to squirt an unknown substance at her face. Rep. Maxwell Frost (D-FL) reported that on Friday he was punched in the face by a man at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

These attacks bring to mind House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA), who was shot along with three other people at a congressional baseball game in the Washington, D.C., area, in 2017. Rep. Scalise almost died.

Rep. Omar’s assailant has been described by his brother in the media as a “right-wing extremist.” Rep. Frost’s attacker appeared to be drunk and reportedly mouthed racial slurs. Rep. Scalise’s attacker was a left-wing activist with a history of domestic violence.

When extremists and unstable people attack elected officials, there can be no room for equivocation. Political violence is not a protest, is not justifiable by passion, and it is most certainly not speech. It is the negation of speech.

The normalization of such behavior would be a profoundly dangerous trend. In 1856, after Rep. Preston Brooks of South Carolina used a walking cane to beat and almost kill Sen. Charles Sumner of Massachusetts on the Senate floor, fury spread among the citizens of those states. The assault was not dismissed as an isolated outburst. It was understood, rightly, as a symptom of a nation losing its ability to resolve moral and political disputes without force. The resulting embitterment helped spark the Civil War, a bloodletting that didn’t end until more than 600,000 Americans were dead.

We might admire or deplore a given Member of Congress. But we must remember that every Member has been chosen in an election in a district that typically includes more than 700,000 Americans. Any physical attack on a representative is therefore an attack on the represented.
​
Whenever we hear someone whose views strike us as blinkered, stupid, hypocritical, or radical to the left or to the right, the best solution is to take a deep breath and resolve to exercise our First Amendment rights.

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