Index Investing News
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Index Investing News
No Result
View All Result

Republicans demonized Nancy Pelosi long before the attack on her husband

by Index Investing News
October 30, 2022
in World
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Home World
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Friday’s brutal attack on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Paul Pelosi, at their San Francisco home was overtly political — and a logical endpoint to the decades deeply personal villainization House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has weathered from her political opponents.

It’s now clear the speaker was the target of Friday’s attack. The assailant broke into the home looking for her, reportedly shouting, “Where is Nancy?” — echoing the chant insurrectionists called out when they breached the US Capitol on January 6 — and saying that he would wait “until Nancy got home” as he tried to tie up Paul Pelosi. The speaker’s husband suffered a skull fracture and serious injuries to his right arm and hands that required surgery after the assailant bludgeoned him with a hammer. (A spokesperson for the speaker said in a statement that Paul Pelosi is expected to make a full recovery.)

Even before she became speaker, Republicans in the party, and those adjacent to it, have demonized Pelosi regularly featuring her in attack ads and lambasting her on Fox News. At least one of her colleagues in the House, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), has directly indicated support for violence against her. And members of right wing militia groups such as the Oathkeepers and the Three Percenters have sought her assassination.

Police haven’t gone into further detail about the attacker’s motivations, but his Facebook posts on conspiracy theories around Covid-19 vaccines, the 2020 election, and the January 6 attack provide a window into his radicalization. Other blog posts under his name contained screeds against minorities, politicians, women and global elites, and content related to QAnon — the false pro-Trump conspiracy theory that a cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles, including prominent Democrats like Pelosi, are running the world.

None of those posts reference Pelosi specifically, but all of them do intersect with the ways she has been a familiar target of the right — and not just on the political fringes.

The long history of Republicans demonizing Nancy Pelosi

Pelosi has been villainized by Republicans since she first ascended to Democratic leadership.

In 2003, within days of her election as House Minority Leader, she quickly faced gendered attacks from Republicans who were, as Mark Z. Barabak wrote for the Los Angeles Times at time: “eager to attack Pelosi as a loopy San Francisco liberal and exploit her city’s reputation as the odd-sock drawer of America. Within days, her face — garish and twisted — showed up in an attack ad slamming the Democrat in a Louisiana House race. (He won anyway.) She surfaced as Miss America, complete with tiara, in a spoof on Rush Limbaugh’s Web site.”

Such attacks continued throughout her tenure as minority leader, including during the 2006 election when Republicans ran a swath of attack ads featuring unflattering photos of Pelosi often looking angry, bug-eyed, or startled. And they increased in 2010, after she had become speaker. Republicans made her the face of their attacks on Democrats’ Affordable Care Act and launched a “Fire Pelosi” campaign, which involved a bus tour and images of Pelosi engulfed in flames.

Under the Trump era and in the years since, the attacks only escalated in tenor. Former President Donald Trump, who has remained silent about the attack on Paul Pelosi, shared doctored videos of the speaker designed to call into question her mental fitness, retweeted accusations that she was “drinking booze on the job,” and had a litany of derogatory nicknames for her, among them “Crazy Nancy,” “Nervous Nancy” and “Nancy Antoinette.”

Many of Trump’s followers echoed his rhetoric, online and in conservative media such as Fox News. In 2021, Fox News host Mark Levin called her “nasty old bag — that’s what she is, a nasty, vicious, unhinged fool” who “has the hots for Trump” and “can’t get Trump out of her head.”

Rhetoric involving Pelosi has often taken violent turns as well. In 2018 and 2019, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) repeatedly seemed to suggest support for Pelosi’s execution, among that of other prominent Democrats, liking a Facebook post that said “a bullet to the head” would be the most expedient way to end Pelosi’s speakership. Taylor Greene also claimed in a Facebook video that Pelosi was guilty of treason, noting “a crime punishable by death is what treason is.”

One candidate in the GOP primary for Senate in Arizona this year aired a Super Bowl ad that featured him dressed as sheriff shooting down an actor playing Pelosi, identified as “Crazy Face Pelosi,” after he says, “The good people of Arizona have had enough of you.” In the period since Labor Day, Republicans have reportedly since spent nearly $40 million on ads that mention Pelosi.

Even on Friday, just hours after the attack, Virginia’s Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin linked the attack on Pelosi’s husband to the November election, drawing condemnation from Democrats who called the comments insensitive.

“There’s no room for violence anywhere, but we’re going to send [Pelosi] back to be with him in California,” Youngkin said at a campaign rally in Stafford for GOP congressional candidate Yesli Vega.

Fox News anchors have also tried to tie the attack to Republicans’ message on crime in the midterms. “This can happen anywhere. Crime is random and that’s why it’s such a significant part of this election story,” Fox anchor Bill Hemmer said on air Friday.

The vilification of Pelosi has taken an even uglier form in ultra right-wing circles online. Some on Trump’s social media platform Truth Social have been openly celebrating Friday’s attack, with the hashtag #PelosiCrimeFamily trending over the weekend.

Arguably the current venom aimed at Pelosi wouldn’t exist without the decades of Republican vitriol against her. President Joe Biden made that connection explicit at a fundraising dinner Friday in Philadelphia, saying that political violence is the natural outcome of the kind of rhetoric that Republicans have enabled. “What makes us think that it’s not going to corrode the political climate?” he asked.

Misogyny, anti-elitism, and anti-democratic ideas feature heavily in attacks on Pelosi

As the first female speaker of the House, and one serving at a time of increasing political polarization and anti-democratic violence, Pelosi has faced uniquely intense attacks that have channeled right-wing anger about her gender, wealth, and pro-democratic rhetoric.

Even when she first ran for Congress, Republicans sought to portray her as unserious, a “liberal dilettante” and “airhead” — insults that ring of sexism.

In 2007, conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh mocked her election to the speakership: “This is a triumph of feminism and estrogen. … And ladies, the long 200-year national nightmare without a woman at the top is now over.” In 2009, Democrats accused Republicans of advancing antiquated attitudes towards women when they ran an ad suggesting that Pelosi should be “put her in her place” on the issue of Afghanistan. And in 2014, a Republican member suggested that she “might want to try” doing her research on the border, comments that her Democratic colleagues took to be patronizing and sexist.

Pelosi doesn’t talk about her gender much, but on occasion has pointed out the disparate treatment and unique attacks she’s faced as a woman in congressional leadership. For instance, amid questions in 2014 about her age and whether she should hand the mantle to a successor, she retorted that then-Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who is just two years younger than her, should be fielding similar questions. And in 2018, after being demonized by Trump and the GOP and still winning the speakership, she told CNBC, “I don’t want women to think if you get attacked, you run away.”

The attacks against Pelosi over the years have also focused on her wealth. On the right, there have long been harsh critiques of “elites,” often stoked by Fox News; increasingly, as my colleague Andrew Prokop recently explained, influential members of the right argue there’s “elite left ‘ruling class’ has captured and is ruining America, and that drastic measures are necessary to fight back against them.”

For many — including one January 6 rioter and recruiter for the antigovernment movement The Three Percenters — Pelosi is the face of that “evil” ruling class. And she’s often been attacked as one of that class’ most hypocritical members. She’s faced criticism for initially dismissing the idea that members of Congress and their family members shouldn’t be allowed to trade stocks, despite the fact that they have access to confidential intelligence.

It’s a critique that was particularly intense given she is one of the richest members of Congress, with an estimated net worth of at least $46 million, and that fortune has grown in minor part thanks to lucrative trades by Paul Pelosi, a venture capitalist. She later endorsed legislation that would make it harder for members of Congress to use information they receive on the job for their own financial gain, but it currently seems unlikely to pass.

Ironically, Trump attacked Pelosi for her wealth and elite status a number of times, perhaps most notably he sought to use her wealth to portray her as out of touch in a 2020 campaign ad ridiculing her expensive fridge filled with ice cream while Americans were going hungry during the Covid-related economic downturn.

Both the sexist and anti-elite lines of attack have directly fed into the anti-democratic attacks that have recently overshadowed the rest. She was a top target during the January 6 insurrection, when the mob tore apart her office, calling out her name and searching for her. Rioters, emboldened by Trump’s lie that the 2020 election was stolen from him, left no doubt as to what they would have done to her: “We did our part. We were looking for Nancy to shoot her in the frickin’ brain. But we didn’t find her,” one woman said in a selfie video.

After the insurrection was put down Pelosi declared that “Democracy won.” But it’s clear that pro-Trump extremists like the man who broke into her house Friday aren’t willing to give up the fight.





Source link

Tags: attackdemonizedHusbandlongNancyPelosiRepublicans
ShareTweetShareShare
Previous Post

Seoul Halloween Crowd Surge Kills Over 100 People

Next Post

Ariana Grande and Liz Gillies Win Halloween with Hilarious ‘Best in Show’ Costumes

Related Posts

Israeli assaults on Gaza kill 70 as ceasefire talks proceed | Israel-Palestine battle Information

Israeli assaults on Gaza kill 70 as ceasefire talks proceed | Israel-Palestine battle Information

by Index Investing News
May 14, 2025
0

A minimum of 50 individuals had been killed in assaults on northern Gaza, together with in Jabalia refugee camp, for...

Authorities determine alleged Tory Lanez jail attacker

Authorities determine alleged Tory Lanez jail attacker

by Index Investing News
May 14, 2025
0

Authorities didn't specify how Lanez was attacked, however a message posted on the rapper’s Instagram account stated Lanez was stabbed...

Earthquake hits Crete as giant 6.3-magnitude tremor strikes Mediterranean island with tsunami alert issued

Earthquake hits Crete as giant 6.3-magnitude tremor strikes Mediterranean island with tsunami alert issued

by Index Investing News
May 14, 2025
0

AN EARTHQUAKE of magnitude 6.3 has hit the vacation hotspot Crete in Greece - prompting a tsunami warning to be...

Mexican safety chief confirms cartel members of the family entered US in a cope with Trump administration

Mexican safety chief confirms cartel members of the family entered US in a cope with Trump administration

by Index Investing News
May 13, 2025
0

MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's safety chief confirmed Tuesday that 17 members of the family of cartel leaders crossed into the...

Ex-NATO chief warns Trump to steer clear of Greenland — RT World Information

Ex-NATO chief warns Trump to steer clear of Greenland — RT World Information

by Index Investing News
May 13, 2025
0

It's “shameless” for the US president to threaten American ally Denmark, Anders Fogh Rasmussen has stated US President Donald Trump...

Next Post
Ariana Grande and Liz Gillies Win Halloween with Hilarious ‘Best in Show’ Costumes

Ariana Grande and Liz Gillies Win Halloween with Hilarious 'Best in Show' Costumes

Starting lineup for Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway

Starting lineup for Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED

James Gunn’s ‘Creature Commandos’ DC Monsters Sequence First Trailer

James Gunn’s ‘Creature Commandos’ DC Monsters Sequence First Trailer

October 20, 2024
Alanna Homes Champion Novice Hurdle: Impaire Et Passe grinds out another Grade One victory at Punchestown | Racing News

Alanna Homes Champion Novice Hurdle: Impaire Et Passe grinds out another Grade One victory at Punchestown | Racing News

April 28, 2023
Weekly mortgage demand drops as rates of interest hit the best stage since August

Weekly mortgage demand drops as rates of interest hit the best stage since August

October 11, 2024
Unexpected end to championship match; controversial finish in Battle Royal

Unexpected end to championship match; controversial finish in Battle Royal

January 11, 2023
How I’m HELOCing My Way to Wealth 

How I’m HELOCing My Way to Wealth 

October 12, 2023
TailoredSpace Opens San Diego Flex Workplace

TailoredSpace Opens San Diego Flex Workplace

April 22, 2025
C, ADBE, CTVA and more

C, ADBE, CTVA and more

September 13, 2023
When to Buy New vs. Used and is That Car Repair Worth the Cash?

When to Buy New vs. Used and is That Car Repair Worth the Cash?

November 1, 2022
Index Investing News

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Investing, World News, Stocks, Market Analysis, Business & Financial News, and more from the top trusted sources.

  • 1717575246.7
  • Browse the latest news about investing and more
  • Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • xtw18387b488

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Investing
  • Financial
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Crypto
  • Property
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion

Copyright © 2022 - Index Investing News.
Index Investing News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In