President Abraham Lincoln is often remembered for his resolve in conducting the presidential election of 1864 even as the Civil War raged on. Yet it is sometimes forgotten that the Confederates who refused to accept the outcome of the 1860 election had already broken away from the Union.
In much the same way, the aftermath of conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination in Utah last week has prompted some Americans to hope for a path of reconciliation. But that hope collides with the reality that many of Kirk’s fiercest opponents—whose relentless rhetoric critics say helped inspire the alleged assassin—show no inclination to repent. The question becomes unavoidable: how does one continue to share a nation with those who openly vilify the dead?
That tension was on full display Friday in the House of Representatives, where Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York—better known as AOC—delivered a pointed denunciation of Kirk’s legacy. Speaking in opposition to a resolution honoring the conservative firebrand, Ocasio-Cortez repeated familiar accusations about Kirk, dismissing him as a figure defined by ignorance and bigotry.