US Representative
Gabrielle Giffords Resigns Year After Arizona Shooting
Cindy Saine
January 26, 2012
Gabrielle Giffords, 41, resigned from the U.S. House of Representatives
Wednesday in an emotional ceremony on the House floor a little more than
one year after she was shot in the head at an event for her constituents
in Tucson, Arizona. Republican and Democratic lawmakers joined to give
the Democrat repeated standing ovations and tearful embraces, and
unanimously passed a border security bill she co-sponsored.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, a Republican from Virginia, recalled
the shooting rampage on January 8 last year, saying the country will
never forget those who lost their lives.
"A little more than a year ago, Americans witnessed a heinous attack on
Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, her staff and the citizens of Tucson,"
said Cantor. "This attack took 6 innocent lives including [congressional
aide] Gabe Zimmerman, injured 13 and shook all of us in the
congressional community, and in fact our nation, to its core."
The shooter, Jared Loughner, is undergoing court ordered treatment for
schizophrenia in a federal prison in Arizona with the goal of making him
fit to stand trial.
In the House chamber, which is often the scene of intense partisan
debate, lawmakers stood crying, cheering and clapping as Representative
Giffords slowly made her way to the podium, holding the arm of her close
friend, Democratic Representative Debbie Wasserman-Schultz.
Wasserman-Schultz wept as she read Giffords's letter of resignation,
where Giffords explained she is resigning to focus on her recovery.
"From my first steps and first words after being shot, to my current
physical and speech therapy, I have given all of myself to being able to
walk back onto the House floor this year to represent Arizona's 8th
Congressional District. However, today, I know that now is not the
time," said Wasserman-Schultz.
Giffords
then handed her letter of resignation to Republican Speaker of the House
John Boehner, who hugged her and cried.
Before the shooting, Giffords was widely admired in the House for
reaching across the aisle to work with her Republican colleagues to find
common sense solutions to problems.
"Congresswoman Giffords' message of bipartisan and civility is one that
all in Washington and in the nation should honor and emulate," said
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. "As Gabby said in her video, which
moved us all so much this weekend, 'We can do so much more by working
together.'"
After the resignation ceremony, the House of Representatives, including
Giffords, voted on her final piece of legislation, a bill that would
impose tougher penalties on smugglers who use small, low-flying aircraft
to avoid radar detection and bring drugs across the U.S. southern border
with Mexico. The measure passed by a vote of 408 to 0.