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The Morning

The Right’s Violence Problem

The Buffalo killings are part of a pattern: Most extremist violence in the U.S. comes from the political right.

A memorial for the Buffalo shooting victims.Credit...Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

Follow our live coverage of the Buffalo mass shooting.

Over the past decade, the Anti-Defamation League has counted about 450 U.S. murders committed by political extremists.

Of these 450 killings, right-wing extremists committed about 75 percent. Islamic extremists were responsible for about 20 percent, and left-wing extremists were responsible for 4 percent.

Nearly half of the murders were specifically tied to white supremacists:

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Credit...Source: Anti-Defamation League

As this data shows, the American political right has a violence problem that has no equivalent on the left. And the 10 victims in Buffalo this past weekend are now part of this toll. “Right-wing extremist violence is our biggest threat,” Jonathan Greenblatt, the head of the ADL, has written. “The numbers don’t lie.”

The pattern extends to violence less severe than murder, like the Jan. 6 attack on Congress. It also extends to the language from some Republican politicians — including Donald Trump — and conservative media figures that treats violence as a legitimate form of political expression. A much larger number of Republican officials do not use this language but also do not denounce it or punish politicians who do use it; Kevin McCarthy, the top House Republican, is a leading example.

It’s important to emphasize that not all extremist violence comes from the right — and that the precise explanation for any one attack can be murky, involving a mixture of ideology, mental illness, gun access and more. In the immediate aftermath of an attack, people are sometimes too quick to claim a direct cause and effect. But it is also incorrect to pretend that right-wing violence and left-wing violence are equivalent problems.

If you talk to members of Congress and their aides these days — especially off the record — you will often hear them mention their fears of violence being committed against them.

Some Republican members of Congress have said that they were reluctant to vote for Trump’s impeachment or conviction partly because of the threats against other members who had already denounced him. House Republicans who voted for President Biden’s infrastructure bill also received threats. Democrats say their offices receive a spike in phone calls and online messages threatening violence after they are criticized on conservative social media or cable television shows.

People who oversee elections report similar problems. “One in six elec­tion offi­cials have exper­i­enced threats because of their job,” the Brennan Center, a research group, reported this year. “Ranging from death threats that name offi­cials’ young chil­dren to racist and gendered harass­ment, these attacks have forced elec­tion offi­cials across the coun­try to take steps like hiring personal secur­ity, flee­ing their homes, and putting their chil­dren into coun­sel­ing.”

There is often overlap between these violent threats and white supremacist beliefs. White supremacy tends to treat people of color as un-American or even less than fully human, views that can make violence seem justifiable. The suspect in the Buffalo massacre evidently posted an online manifesto that discussed replacement theory, a racial conspiracy theory that Tucker Carlson promotes on his Fox News show.

(This Times story examines how replacement theory has entered the Republican mainstream.)

“History has taught us that what begins with words ends in far worse,” Representative Liz Cheney, one of the few Republicans who have repeatedly and consistently denounced violence and talk of violence from the right, wrote on Twitter yesterday. “The House GOP leadership has enabled white nationalism, white supremacy, and antisemitism,” Cheney wrote, and called on Republican leaders to “renounce and reject these views and those who hold them.”

A few other Republicans, like Senator Mitt Romney, have taken a similar stance. But many other prominent Republicans have taken a more neutral stance or even embraced talk of violence.

Some have spoken openly about violence as a legitimate political tool — and not just Trump, who has done so frequently.

At the rally that preceded the Jan. 6 attack, Representative Mo Brooks suggested the crowd should “start taking down names and kicking ass.” Before she was elected to Congress, Marjorie Taylor Greene supported the idea of executing Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi and other top Democrats. Representative Paul Gosar once posted an animated video altered to depict himself killing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and swinging swords at Biden.

Rick Perry, a former Texas governor, once called the Federal Reserve “treasonous” and talked about treating its chairman “pretty ugly.” During Greg Gianforte’s campaign for Montana’s House seat, he went so far as to assault a reporter who asked him a question he didn’t like; Gianforte won and has since become Montana’s governor.

These Republicans have received no meaningful sanction from their party. McCarthy, the Republican leader in the House, has been especially solicitous of Brooks and other members who use violent imagery.

This Republican comfort with violence is new. Republican leaders from past decades, like Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole, Howard Baker and the Bushes, did not evoke violence.

“In a stable democracy,” Steven Levitsky, a Harvard political scientist, told me, “politicians unambiguously reject violence and unambiguously expel from their ranks antidemocratic forces.”

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Pro-Russian troops in Mariupol yesterday.Credit...Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
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Kathy Barnette, a Republican candidate for Senate in Pennsylvania.Credit...Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

Biden should invoke the Defense Production Act to fix the baby formula shortage, says Suraj Patel.

The government’s lending practices have trapped generations of student borrowers. They deserve a bailout, Charlie Eaton, Amber Villalobos and Frederick Wherry write.

Republican voters want a leader who has Donald Trump’s agenda, but not necessarily his personality, Patrick Healy and Adrian J. Rivera write.

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Credit...Illustration by Patricia Doria

Online intimacy: The “e-pimps” of OnlyFans.

Eyes on you: Your boss may be keeping tabs on you, using questionable science.

Business casual: Leave the hoodie at home. The dining dress code is back.

A Times classic: Brisket for beginners.

Advice from Wirecutter: Say goodbye to lukewarm coffee.

Lives Lived: When the semipro boxer Jürgen Blin faced Muhammad Ali in a ring in Switzerland in 1971, he knew he was fated to lose the fight. He did, as expected, in the seventh round. Blin died at 79.

Olga Koutseridi, a graduate student adviser at the University of Texas at Austin, formed many of her childhood food memories in Mariupol, Ukraine. Now she is documenting the dishes she grew up eating as “an act of resistance,” Julia Moskin writes in The Times.

At the start of the war, Koutseridi began collecting recipes from scattered Ukrainian family members on Telegram, Skype and WhatsApp. She researched archives in Russian, Ukrainian and English, and she contacted other Ukrainian expatriates and food experts around the world. “I had this urge to record,” she said. “It suddenly seemed like it was all going to disappear so fast.”

Alongside Ukrainian classics, Mariupol’s culinary specialties include Greek meat-stuffed breads and lots of eggplant, a legacy of the Ottoman Empire. Among the recipes Koutseridi has transcribed so far: varenyky — dumplings stuffed with sour cherries and cheese — and borsch. “Maybe now is not the time to celebrate Ukrainian food,” Koutseridi said. “But this feels like the only chance we have to preserve it.”

Try three of her recipes.

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Credit...Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Victoria Granof.

Chebureki are the southern Ukrainian branch of the empanada family.

Kendrick Lamar’s first album in five years, “Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers.”

After directing the sci-fi films “Annihilation” and “Ex Machina,” Alex Garland has a new film, “Men.”

Seth Meyers skewered Tucker Carlson.

Now Time to Play

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The pangram from yesterday’s Spelling Bee was haircut. Here is today’s puzzle — or you can play online.

Here’s today’s Wordle. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: People make them every morning (four letters).

If you’re in the mood to play more, find all our games here.


Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. The word “techopalypse” — about cratering tech stocks — appeared for the first time in The Times recently.

Here’s today’s front page.

The Daily” is about abortion. “The Ezra Klein Show” features Anne Applebaum.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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David Leonhardt writes The Morning, The Times’s flagship daily newsletter. He has previously been an Op-Ed columnist, Washington bureau chief, co-host of “The Argument” podcast, founding editor of The Upshot section and a staff writer for The Times Magazine. In 2011, he received the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. More about David Leonhardt

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