WASHINGTON: The US House of Representatives dipped one of its members for the first time in more than a decade on Wednesday, rebuking the Republican rather than anime video that described it killing Progressive Democrats Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez and swung two swords at President Joe Biden.
After 223-207 collected a party at a democratic-controlled house, Representative Paul Gosar was called to a stand in the room well to hear his criticism and to be stripped of two committee assignments.
This step only draws two votes of Republican Party support, which mostly describes Democratic actions as partisan politics.
Gosar posted an anime video this month which showed him to kill Ocasio-Cortez.
He rejected the accusation threatening and after initially removing the video from his Twitter account, Gosar Retweet on Wednesday night after criticism.
This is the latest example of increased rhetoric violence in Congress, 10 months after thousands of supporters of President Donald Trump invaded the US Capitol as a member of parliament to declare his election defeat.
“What’s very difficult about saying this wrong?” Ocasio-Cortez asked the debate before the voting.
“Will we live with the promises that we make our children, that this is a place where we will defend each other regardless of trust, that our core dignity?” Gosar, Allied Trump and Hardline Conservative, said: “There is no threat in cartoons in addition to the threat that immigration poses to our country,” he said, adding he did not recommend violence against anyone.
The 62-year-old Arizona Republic has described Trump’s followers who attacked the Capitol as “Patriot Peace,” chose to oppose the election victory of 2020 Biden in January and support false claims from stolen elections.
Democrats said the criticism was needed because the leader of the Republic of Republic of Kevin McCarthy refused to discipline Gosar.
Cacure is a symbolic reprimand that carries a fine or other penalties.
Republican home leaders recommend but does not require members they choose not to movement.
Support from two Republican Resolution Drew support from the two Republicans who opposed Trump: Representative Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, both of which sat in the house panel investigating Riot Capitol 6 Jan.
“It is very important for us to be very clear that violence does not have a place in our political discourse,” Cheney told reporters after voting.
“I don’t think this must be a problem about parties, about partisan politics.” During the debate, Democrats said there was no other workplace in the United States, it would allow one employee to post videos that threaten others.
McCarthy repeatedly described the Democrats as “rules for you but not for me” in arguing with movements on the floor of the house.
“The speaker burned a house on the door of the door,” he said about the Democrat Nancy Pelosi.
The threat of violence becomes more common in the US political arena.
Some of the 13 Republic of the Republic to pass the $ 1 trillion Biden infrastructure bill has reported receiving the threat of death to their votes, and dozens of state-level election workers have reported receiving threats from Trump’s supporters who were angry with unfounded accusations, that the November 2020 defeat is the result of fraud.
Democrats suspect Representatives of the Republic of Marjorie Taylor Greene from this year’s committee assignment for burner comments that includes support for violence against Democrats.
The last time the US house was criticized was 2010, when the action was taken against the democratic representative Charles Rangel after he was found guilty of some ethical violations, including improper fundraising and financial disclosure reports and federal tax refunds.