Isobel Charle, Producer
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Washingtonians cannot help but feel the emotional weight of political violence after this weekend's assassination of a top Democratic state lawmaker in Minnesota, and the shooting of a fellow legislator.
Former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed in their home. Sen. John Hoffman, D-Champlin, and his wife were wounded. Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson expressed shock and said the attacks "must be condemned in the strongest possible terms." They are the latest example of rising political violence, including this spring's arson at the Pennsylvania's Governor's mansion.
David Schultz, professor of political science at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, compares the current climate to the turbulent 1960s.
"Once violence starts to occur, people get used to violence, or it becomes part of the 'game,'" Schultz observed. "That seems to be where we're degenerating right now."
He pointed to last year's assassination attempts on President Donald Trump on the campaign trail, along with increased threats against poll workers. Schultz stressed in a healthy democracy, ballots, elections and other engagement tools resolve differences, not violence. He worries the current climate will curtail open meetings and discourage elected officials from talking with their constituents.
Schultz noted many in society have grown used to a more isolated way of life. He adds making matters worse, political messages spread through social media fuel misinformation and radicalization.
"Falsity travels more rapidly, more deeply than truth," Schultz observed. "The relative anonymity or distance of the social media also emboldens people to radicalize. Put all that altogether, that gets us part of the recipe of where we are in our society right now."
While he is encouraged younger voters may reject divisive politics, Schultz doubts political tension and violence will end any time soon.
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