November 29, 2015
The
suspected gunman is taken into custody outside Planned Parenthood in
Colorado Springs on Friday. (Photo: Isaiah J. Downing/Reuters)
After two days of near-radio silence over the deadly shootings at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado, several Republican presidential candidates addressed the attack Sunday.
Former
Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee condemned the alleged shooter, 57-year-old
Robert Lewis Dear, who reportedly told investigators “no more baby
parts” when questioned following his arrest Friday.
“What
he did is domestic terrorism,” Huckabee said in an interview with CNN’s
“State of the Union” Sunday. “And what he did is absolutely abominable,
especially to us in the pro-life movement, because there’s nothing
about any of us that would condone or in any way look the other way on
something like this.”
Huckabee
contrasted his reaction with Secretary of State John Kerry’s comments
following the recent terror attacks in Paris. Kerry said the January
assault on the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris had a “rationale” that
could be understood, while the attacks earlier this month did not.
“We’re
not going to have the kind of language that you heard from John Kerry
where he talked about legitimizing or rationalizing terrorist actions,”
Huckabee said. “There’s no legitimizing, there’s no rationalizing. It
was mass murder. It was absolutely unfathomable. And there’s no excuse
for killing other people, whether it’s happening inside the Planned
Parenthood headquarters, inside their clinics where many millions of
babies die, or whether it’s people attacking Planned Parenthood.”
Three people were killed — including a veteran police officer — and 12 others were wounded in Friday’s shootings.
Carly
Fiorina — whose controversial comments about Planned Parenthood videos
during a Republican debate briefly elevated her candidacy — called the
shootings “a tragedy.”
“Nothing
justifies this,” Fiorina said on “Fox News Sunday.” “And presumably,
this man who appears deranged, if nothing else, will be tried for murder
as he should be. But it’s a tragedy, especially on a holiday weekend.“
The
former Hewlett-Packard chief executive had called for the defunding of
Planned Parenthood in the wake of videos she said showed workers
discussing harvesting fetal tissue while “a fully formed fetus [lies] on
the table, its heart beating, its legs kicking” — a claim that proved to be false.
“We’ve
experienced so much hateful language, hateful speech, such a negative
environment has been created … around the idea of safe and legal
abortion,” Vicki Cowart, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Rocky
Mountains, said on ABC’s “This Week.” “And we’ve seen that across the
country from all sorts of speakers in the last few months. I can’t
believe that this isn’t contributing to some folks, mentally unwell or
not, thinking that it’s OK to target Planned Parenthood or to target
abortion providers.”
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders suggested such rhetoric may have inspired the alleged gunman.
“While
we still do not know the shooter’s motive, what is clear is that
Planned Parenthood has been the subject of vicious and unsubstantiated
statements attacking an organization that provides critical health care
for millions of Americans,“ the Democratic hopeful said in a statement.
“I strongly support Planned Parenthood and the work it is doing and hope
people realize that bitter rhetoric can have unintended consequences.”
Fiorina fired back.
“This
is so typical of the left to immediately begin demonizing the messenger
because they don’t agree with the message,” she said. “Anyone who tries
to link this terrible tragedy to anyone who opposes abortion or opposes
the sale of body parts is … this is typical left-wing tactics.”
Dr.
Ben Carson, the retired neurosurgeon-turned-GOP hopeful, described the
shootings as a “hate crime” and called for a “rational discussion” from
those on both sides of the abortion issue.
“Unfortunately,
there’s a lot of extremism coming from all areas,” Carson said on ABC’s
“This Week” Sunday. “It’s one of the biggest problems that I think is
threatening to tear our country apart. We get into our separate corners
and we hate each other, we want to destroy those with whom we disagree.”
He
added: “You know, all you have to do is go to an article on the
Internet and go to the comments section. You don’t get five comments
down before people start calling each other names and acting like
idiots, you know. What happened to us? What happened to the civility
that used to characterize our society?”
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