House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer said Thursday he and Speaker Nancy Pelosi made a mistake when they called anti-health care reform protests “un-American” last year.
“That was not a good phrase; not a good use of language. It was not correct,” Mr. Hoyer, Maryland Democrat, said, adding that he did not see anything wrong with vigorous debating of philosophies.
In August, in the middle of a summer in which members of Congress were sometimes shouted down at town halls by constituents furious over the health care bill, Mr. Hoyer and Mrs. Pelosi wrote an Op-Ed article in USA Today decrying the tenor of the debate and complaining about baseless charges.
The leaders called the protests “an ugly campaign” and said it was clear some were trying to disrupt “a civil dialogue.”
“Drowning out opposing views is simply un-American,” the two wrote.
In their piece, they did not single out the “tea party” activists, who were among the vocal opponents of Democrats’ health care bills, though the “un-American” charge has still become a rallying cry for the movement.
Mr. Hoyer said he made a mistake in reading the Op-Ed too quickly and approving it. But he also said there are some tea party activists that go beyond the acceptable level of debate, and he gave as one example rallies where speakers accuse Democrats of being communists.
• Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.
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