One message left for Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., on his office voicemail describes him as a “backstabbing son of a bitch.” Another says Kinzinger, an Air Force pilot who flew in Iraq and is a lieutenant colonel in the Air National Guard, is “going to swing for f—ing treason, you communist f—.”
On July 5, Kinzinger, one of only two Republicans serving on the bipartisan Jan. 6 House committee, which meets again Tuesday, released a compilation of the threats he’s received, including those directed at his wife and newborn child.
Despite multiple examples of GOP leaders’ decrying threats to conservatives presumed to be loyal to Trump, they’ve been silent in response to threats against Kinzinger.
These messages are an appropriate prelude to Tuesday’s hearing, which is expected to focus on the extremist violence supporters of former President Donald Trump waged at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
And as the voicemails make clear, Kinzinger was being subjected to such vile, profanity-laced threats because of his work on the Jan. 6 committee and because of his criticism of Trump. The threats, he said when he released them, “are unhinged and all too common.”
Threats of violence over politics has increased heavily in the last few years. But the darkness has reached new lows. My new interns made this compilation of recent calls they’ve received while serving in my DC office.
— Adam Kinzinger (@RepKinzinger) July 5, 2022
WARNING: this video contains foul & graphic language. pic.twitter.com/yQJvvAHBVV
Despite multiple examples of GOP leaders’ decrying threats to conservatives presumed to be loyal to Trump, they’ve been silent in response to threats against Kinzinger, who is also one of only 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump for his role in the Jan. 6 attack.
Given that these threats appear to be coming from the GOP base, that silence from Republican leadership is, at best, a tolerance of threatened violence. At worst, it’s an approval of such.
The House Jan. 6 committee holds its seventh public hearing on Tuesday, July 12, at 1 p.m. ET. Get expert analysis in real time on our live blog: http://msnbc.com/jan6hearings.
Threats have also been phoned into the home where Kinzinger lives with his wife and newborn child: “We know where your family is, and we’re going to get you, you little c—sucker.” Another man threatened, “Gonna get your wife, gonna get your kids.”
A female caller indicated that she had prayed “if it be God’s will, that you suffer,” and a male caller expressed his hope that someone would kill “your nasty mom and your nasty wife.”
Those calls followed a threatening handwritten letter addressed to Kinzinger’s wife that arrived at their home last month. The letter writer accused the representative of having “broken his oath” and predicted that while “it might take time,” Kinzinger “will be executed.” The writer, who claimed to be Christian, then warned that she and her child would “be joining Adam in hell, too!”
The cascade of violent threats against a fellow Republican has been met with a deafening — and dangerous — silence by the GOP.








