Rep. Andy Harris Signs Letter Demanding Investigation of Left-Wing Enemies

On Sept. 11, a group of ultraright House Republicans delivered a letter to House leadership demanding the formation of a select committee on “the money, influence, and power behind the radical left’s assault on America and the rule of law.”
Twenty-three reactionary members of Congress signed the letter, including some of the most extreme right-wingers in the House of Representatives. Among the signers is our own First District congressman, Andrew P. Harris, who’s added his voice to the cacophony demanding that something be done about the so-called left-wing threat to America.
The letter was composed quickly after last week’s sniper murder of Charlie Kirk, a right-wing podcaster and campus provocateur. It presents a rationalization for investigating the finances of left-wing organizations and persons by blaming them not only for Kirk’s violent death, but for all manner of other problems ills in the country today:
- Many attacks on “our way of life”
- Sustained breakdown of law and order
- Open borders that allow “illegal aliens” to victimize law-abiding Americans
- Murders of innocent Americans, prominent and unknown alike
- Assassination attempts of GOP politicians
The solution proposed in the letter is to “follow the money” by investigating such persons and groups as George Soros, the Wren Collective, the Southern Poverty Law Center, the U.N., and radicals and organizations suspected of financing the concerted effort to destroy MAGA America. They want to trace the money that, they claim without evidence, funds “the NGOs, donors, media, public officials, and all entities driving this coordinated attack.”
But moderate observers and commentators see a broader aim — the end of free speech when the speaker disagrees with the views of the current ruling party.
As expressed by
Democracy Docket, a digital news platform, “The Trump administration’s rhetoric around Kirk’s murder and its attempt to link it to progressive causes and groups has raised fears it seeks to use the killing as false justification to further crack down on political speech and opposition politics in the U.S.”
Harris and the other letter signers have joined a loud and strident chorus of alt-right voices demanding “justice” by dismantling the liberal and left organizations that they claim are fomenting violence.
Also on Sept. 11, President Trump
told reporters, "We have radical left lunatics out there and we just have to beat the hell out of them."
On Sept. 15, Vice President Vance called for the
mass doxing of anyone celebrating Kirk’s murder. “Call them out. Hell, call their employer.” A growing number of companies are
terminating and suspending employees for posting messages critical of Charlie Kirk on social media.
Stephen Miller, Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy, referred to the Democratic Party as “a vast domestic terror movement” responsible for Kirk’s murder. He said the administration would target those who are “paying for violence.”
“With God as my witness, we are going to use every resource we have at the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, and throughout this government to identify, disrupt, dismantle, and destroy these networks and make America safe again for the American people,” Miller vowed in the Oval Office.
“I don’t care how — it could be a RICO charge, a conspiracy charge, conspiracy against the United States, insurrection — but we are going to do what it takes to dismantle the organizations and the entities,” he added.
The average American realizes that this sort of language is dangerous.
A
Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted after Kirk’s murder found that most Americans are worried about political violence and partisan divisions:
- 63% said the way Americans talk about political issues does "a lot" to encourage violence.
- 79% said people are less tolerant of opposing viewpoints than they were 20 years ago.
- 66% said they were concerned over the prospect of violence committed against people in their community because of their political beliefs.
- 71% said that “American society is broken.”
Read the right-wingers’ letter and judge it for yourself:
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
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