Early one morning in June 2017, Steve Scalise was standing at second base during practice for a politicians’ charity baseball game when a gunman opened fire at the players, shooting him in the hip. The attack, by a shooter who was targeting Republican lawmakers, left Scalise with life-threatening injuries and facing a long and painful recovery.
Now Scalise, a hardline conservative who opposes abortion, immigration and gun control, could become second in line to the presidency after Republicans nominated him for speaker of the House of Representatives Wednesday. The 58-year-old congressman from Louisiana has long been considered a rising star in the Republican Party, a gregarious lawmaker who currently holds the influential role of House Majority Leader. He has been seen as a bridge between Trump-era conservatives and more traditional establishment Republicans. And, as an increasingly powerful right-wing lawmaker, he also draws savage criticism from many Democrats and progressives.
– Pro-gun rights –
In 2014, Scalise had to face down demands for his resignation after admitting he addressed a gathering with ties to Ku Klux Klan former leader David Duke. Scalise apologized, saying “it was a mistake I regret.” But, despite his shooting injuries, an issue on which Scalise has made no concessions is gun control. He is a fierce supporter of the National Rifle Association, which gives him an A+ rating, and has voted repeatedly to expand gun rights.
Scalise “will continue fighting to protect every citizen’s Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms,” his website says. He has routinely opposed gun control legislation, even taking to the House floor for a speech criticizing activists in April 2013, just four months after 20 elementary school children and six adults were shot dead. “We were all shocked and saddened by the murders at Sandy Hook. But I think what’s also disappointing is when you have these tragedies, unfortunately there are people — Washington politicians — that try to take advantage of those tragedies to then come behind and try to impose their agenda,” he said.
Scalise was born in New Orleans and graduated from Louisiana State University. He worked as a software engineer and marketing executive before being elected as a Louisiana state lawmaker in 1995. He headed to the House of Representatives in 2008, and quickly made a name for himself on conservative issues. In 2014, he was elected chief Republican whip, a position seen as a stepping-stone, before becoming the second-highest-ranking House Republican under then-speaker Kevin McCarthy earlier this year.
In August, Scalise was diagnosed with multiple myeloma blood cancer and said he was undergoing treatment. McCarthy’s ousting opened an opportunity for Scalise, but he still faces major obstacles to win over enough Republicans to seize the speaker’s role. – Michael Mathes