Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Sunday that he has faced death threats after discussing the brutal hammer attack against Paul Pelosi, the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
“There have been more threats against elected officials. It’s been documented that I’ve received a couple of,” Schumer said during his Spectrum News NY1 debate against Republican rival Joe Pinion.
“We now have to calm the rhetoric down,” he said at Union College in Schenectady, “and condemn violence where it occurs.”
But Pinion slammed Schumer for using divisive rhetoric and inspiring violence against two conservative Supreme Court justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. Schumer had said in March 2020 the justices would “pay the worth” in the event that they voted to limit abortion rights.
“There is barely one person on this stage whose rhetoric has quite literally driven an American to the doorstep of a Supreme Court justice to kill him. That was Chuck Schumer,” Pinion said.
“It’s Chuck Schumer’s whose divisive rhetoric has led to the environment we see today.”
Schumer said on the time, “‘You may have released the whirlwind and you’ll pay the worth. You is not going to know what hit you in case you go forward with these awful decisions.”
The senator backtracked after facing public condemnation from Chief Justice John Roberts and GOP lawmakers, saying he was talking a couple of political backlash.
Schumer said Sunday night, “The words I used that day were probably the improper selection of words. I said that then and I say that now.”
But he insisted that “I even have never advocated violence in any way. Never have, never do, never will.”
Schumer, a former congressman, is running for a fifth term.
Pinion, a former conservative TV commentator, also said the media has a “greater responsibility” to advertise civil discourse and discourage heated rhetoric and condemn hatred and violence.
Schumer said, “thank God” that Paul Pelosi is predicted to make a “full recovery” after speaking several times to Speaker Pelosi.