BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT
JOHN DICKERSON: We turn now to Republican Senator James Lankford of Oklahoma. He is a member of the Intelligence and Homeland Security Committees and he joins us this morning from Oklahoma City. Good morning, Senator.
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD (R-Oklahoma/@SenatorLankford): Good morning to you.
JOHN DICKERSON: This horrible shooting in Pittsburgh seems to be part of a trend. The act of anti-Semitic violence in the United States have increased fifty-seven percent since between 2016 and 2017, that's the largest increase ever, why do you think that is?
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD (R-Oklahoma/@SenatorLankford): Yeah. It's very difficult to be able to tell, obviously, why any person this deranged would step out and do that, or any other person reaching out to be able to press back against people because of their faith. So I think we continue to be able to ask those questions that you're asking right now, we'll continue to be able to have dialogue and to be able pushback on anyone who tries to reach out for anyone of a person of faith or race or whatever it might be.
JOHN DICKERSON: One of the things that the shooter in this horrible shooting, apparently, said, or was guided by, was this idea that this caravan coming from Central America was being supported by globalists, some people say George Soros' name. President Trump has made that same case. Do you see any connection between the shooter motivated by that and the case the President has been making?
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: I don't because this particular shooter also condemned President Trump, saying he was a globalist and that he was allowing some of this to happen. So I-- I don't see any connection where you would connect the President to this particular shooting, just like I wouldn't see that connecting Democrats when a person walked up to a baseball game last year in Washington, DC, and said, "Is this where the Republicans are practicing?" And then opened fire on them simply because they were Republicans. So the-- this issue about a-- a shooting at Mother Emanuel Church in South Carolina or shooting in a synagogue or shooting at a Republican baseball practice, this is just hate-filled individuals that are very deranged.
JOHN DICKERSON: I think the distinction that--let's be frank--the distinction critics of the President have been making is that he has been making this specific-- specific narrative claim that there are Middle Easterners in this caravan with no evidence that that exists, and that that was the direct link to this shooter. So it's not just unfocused criticism, but very-- it's-- but a very specific narrative that this shooter seems to pick-- have picked up on.
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: Again, we're back to the same issue, I-- I believe also the same shooter was condemning President Trump for being a globalist at the time. So I-- I-- I don't see where President Trump is somehow to blame for this. Now, President-- President Trump and his rhetoric is very direct, but I don't see how you connect President Trump to a person who's deranged going into a synagogue. He's been very clear about anti-Semitism, as well as all of us have been. That is a-- a sick, vile thing.
JOHN DICKERSON: Let me ask you, Senator, about the larger issue of-- of domestic terrorism. We had a number of incidents this week, you have this shooting, you have the attempted bombing, you have the shooting of two African-Americans in-- in-- in Kentucky. You're a member of the Homeland Security Committee. Give me your sense of the threat from domestic terrorism.
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: This is always one of the most difficult threats that we have, actually. International terrorism, we're very aggressive on. We have not had a major terrorist event from international terrorism in a very long time now. We'll continue to be able to be vigilant in that work. But the most difficult thing is we, as Americans, have the basic right of protection of privacy and we should have that right of protection of privacy. But that also means it's very difficult for law enforcement if someone does what is called goes from flash to bang very, very quickly. This individual yesterday, apparently, posted something after saying all these horrible things on-- about Jews for a long time, posted something saying that "I'm going to go in." And then suddenly took off. No one-- it was not on anyone's radar, it wasn't being tracked by anyone. This is a person that might have been paranoid that the government was watching, but the government's not watching people that-- people live their normal lives. And if he do-- doesn't have a criminal record, it's not on anyone's radar, very difficult to be able to track someone within the United States that snaps and takes off and does something like this.
JOHN DICKERSON: In-- in the response to what the administration thought was a threat from--
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: Yeah.
JOHN DICKERSON: --immigrants, they started checking the social media histories of people coming into the United States in a way the Americans and this domestic terror threat, in this case, you had online postings of the shooter; then in the case of the Florida man he was, obviously, on social media, saying some things that were very consistent with his actions. There's nothing that can be done in social media to keep track of these domestic terrorists?
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: No. We're not trying to track each other, but there are-- are things that if someone shows up on a radar that law enforcement can go get a warrant, can go through the process to be able to examine, obviously, if people have their social media post public, that can also be monitored to see if someone is trying to be able to foment violence in any sort. So there are ways to be able to monitor that without trying to violate someone's basic constitutional freedoms--
JOHN DICKERSON: In--
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: --if they're posting things in open source.
JOHN DICKERSON: In response to the mail bombings this week, you said "we-- we have to work-- we have to all work together as Americans to stop this." What actual specific work are you talking about?
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: Yeah, that is the difficult thing that is not a legislative task. Everyone says let's have a vote and let's solve all these issues. If I go back to what Doctor-- Doctor Martin Luther King Junior said years ago, his statement was you don't overcome hate with more hate. You don't try to drive out darkness with more darkness. Only love can do that. And as a culture we have got to figure out how to be able to communicate with each other on difficult things. Now, again, this person sending out package bombs to people was a very deranged individual in all likelihood from everything that we've seen back from him and more information will continue to be able to come out. But the challenge that we have is our social media rhetoric, our intensity of our dialogue, is no longer about having dialogue and conversation. It's shouting someone else down that you disagree with and trying to silence them rather than having dialogue with them.
JOHN DICKERSON: In your view, Senator, the President of the United States has a bigger voice than anybody else in politics or in the world, really. Does the President--
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: True.
JOHN DICKERSON: --as it stands right now, meet that standard that you are talking about for public discourse?
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: No, I-- I've said this to the President before. I-- I think that the President needs to be more clear in his rhetoric and doesn't need to be as caustic in his rhetoric. That's the way he chooses to be able to communicate things and I don't think it's always helpful in that. We have the same issue on university campuses all around the country, where individuals can't speak out on their views because they'll get shouted down. We had that around the Kavanaugh hearings, where you'd walk through the Capitol and people would shout at you, trying to be able to silence individuals. That doesn't help in our basic dialogue and I think the President should, and I think all of us that are in Congress, and anyone in public life, should set a good role model example of what it means to have respectful dialogue.
JOHN DICKERSON: All right. Senator, we're out of time. We thank you very much for being with us.
SENATOR JAMES LANKFORD: Thank you.
BREAK IN TRANSCRIPT