The House of Representatives voted on Wednesday to table a resolution aimed at censuring Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) concerning her comments on the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
The resolution was rejected with a narrow 214 to 213 vote, in which all Democrats and four Republicans opposed the censure proposed by Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC), who is currently campaigning for governor of South Carolina. The Republicans voting against the resolution were Reps. Mike Flood (R-NE), Jeff Hurd (R-CO), Cory Mills (R-FL), and Tom McClintock (R-CA).
This marks the fifth attempt to censure Omar. Mace’s resolution criticized Omar for sharing several posts on X, especially a particular video featuring a man repairing a roof, which labeled Kirk a “reprehensible human being” and challenged the “revisionist history” surrounding him.
https://x.com/maddenifico/status/1966307794438717513
Importantly, the resolution did not include any direct quotes from Omar, a point highlighted by her chief of staff in a communication sent to other House chiefs on Wednesday. The email stated, “The entire thing is based on a video from someone else she reposted, and then a characterization of Omar’s interview with Mehdi Hasan, which contains zero quotes.” Politico obtained this message.
During her interview with Hasan last week at a Zeteo town hall, Omar faced criticism for expressing condolences to Kirk’s family while also accusing others of overlooking Kirk’s past controversial remarks.
Mace contended that Omar was “mocking a political assassination and celebrating murder,” which she cited as justification for removing Omar from her committee assignments. “Ilhan Omar has shown us exactly who she is: someone who defends political violence and refuses to condemn the loss of innocent lives when it doesn’t suit her agenda, even the cold-blooded assassination of Charlie Kirk,” Mace stated.
The two lawmakers have exchanged several contentious remarks on X, with Mace suggesting, “We would love to see you deported back to Somalia,” and Omar replying, “Would love to see you get the help you need next. You belong in rehab, not Congress.”
This resolution comes amid calls from leaders in both parties to reduce aggressive rhetoric and political violence. While some GOP members have blamed Democrats and the media for escalating political violence, Democrats argue that extreme rhetoric is a concern for both sides, citing violent incidents against their members as evidence.
The failure of this censure attempt also reflects growing discomfort among Republicans regarding the frequent use of censure as a political tool. Once reserved for the most serious offenses, the censure has become more common and politicized as party divisions deepen.
In response to the censure motion against Omar, Congressional Progressive Caucus chairman Greg Casar (D-TX) introduced a resolution to censure Rep. Cory Mills (R-FL) over alleged domestic violence, stolen valor, and campaign finance issues.
Additionally, Rep. Marc Veasey (D-TX) is pursuing impeachment articles against FBI Director Kash Patel and Pam Bondi as a counter to Mace’s censure efforts. Veasey remarked, “If [Mace] (soon to be a sucker and loser in her governor’s race) wants to strip [Omar] of her committees for words she never said, MANY people are saying we should impeach the incompetent Kash Patel and Pam Bondi for the lies they ACTUALLY TOLD!!” in a post on X.
https://x.com/nicholaswu12/status/1968299348623843816
https://x.com/RepVeasey/status/1968297906152046964
https://x.com/IlhanMN/status/1968337419146854629
https://x.com/NancyMace/status/1968323903354438074
https://x.com/nicholaswu12?lang=en