Bulwark Takes - 1: Congressman on MN Shooter’s Hit List Speaks Out
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Sam Stein talks with Representative Greg Landsman about being named on a shooter’s target list, what it was like waiting for the suspect to be caught, and why political violence feels closer than ev...er.
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pockethose.com slash terms. Hey guys, me Sam Stein, managing editor at The Bullwork
and I'm joined by Congressman Greg Landsman of Ohio.
He's here to talk about what is a fairly scary situation happening on the Hill, but also
off the Hill.
It relates to what happened in Minnesota over the weekend, the horrible assassination of
a lawmaker there and her husband on the targeting of multiple other lawmakers.
The Congressman, thanks for joining us.
I appreciate it. We
brought you on because yesterday brought some really unfortunate news and I just sort of
want to get a sense of what it's like that you were on the list of people allegedly targeted
by this Minnesota shooter. I guess I'll just start with tell me about how you discovered this and what it was like knowing that you were on that list.
Yeah, law enforcement reached out Sunday morning and let us know and then, you know, asked us to take, you know, some additional precautions around security and which we did. And we worked with local law enforcement.
And because we used local resources, I wanted to make sure people understood why.
And I do also want to talk about this.
I think this is an opportunity for those of us who want to see an end to this to go out
there and say, look, there's a better way.
I remember politics when this didn't happen.
And I believe there's a time when we can, you know,
when we can not have to deal with any of this.
And so I think a part of that is saying this is extremism.
It's not Democrat or Republican.
It's just unwell people who have been radicalized,
probably online and
You know we we owe it to each other to work together
In a bipartisan way to end this kind of stuff
So, you know this stuff doesn't happen anymore
And so yeah, that's I feel very strongly that we've got to get back to a kind of politics where we disagree
But this stuff doesn't happen. I want to get to the larger picture stuff about you know the extremism in our politics but I
also want to talk about sort of the minute-by-minute stuff too because it is you know it's horrifying
and I want to understand what it's like to be faced with it. So this shooting happened,
I'm trying to make sure I have this correctly, but we got wind of it Saturday morning.
The suspect was not apprehended until a day, day and a half later.
So Sunday night.
Yeah, Sunday night.
So authorities knew that you were on the list, but they did not tell you until Sunday, correct?
Yeah.
I, I don't know if they had told Capitol police before that.
It's not entirely clear when, you know, who knew what, right.
Or who knew what wing, uh, but Sunday morning, if I remember correctly,
it was around 10 30, we found out.
So it was about 12 hours between the time we found out and they finally apprehended the guy.
Now, he never left Minnesota, but we didn't know that.
You didn't know that.
Right.
Yeah. So you have police walk in the perimeter of your house every 30 minutes and you're just waiting.
And yes, it's unlikely that this guy got in his car
and started driving to other places,
but it's possible, it's a 10 hour drive.
I mean, I remember my son and I were talking about it.
He said, well, Minnesota is really far away.
And I said, buddy, it's a 10 hour drive.
Where, and he did the math, he could be in our backyard.
It had been 10 hours.
It had been 10 hours. It had been 10 hours more than that.
So, and once they found them immediate, immediate relief, but there was a, there
was a, there was a period of time on Sunday night when I sort of started pacing
around the house thinking, you know, is this guy here, you know, cause why, you
know, why, why is my name on this list?
Well, let me ask you that.
Why did they give, have you had any, had any explanation for why your name is on the
list? I mean, no offense to you. I just you're not from Minnesota. No, I mean, I'm outspoken
on a couple, you know, a couple of big controversial issues. You know, I'm a Jewish member of Congress,
you know, who's very outspoken about Israel in this war.
I don't know.
I think law enforcement, I know law enforcement has its hands full at the moment in terms
of, you know, first they had to get the guy and second they've got to put the case together.
And so, you know, that is, that's the most important thing.
And you know, at some point I do hope to
get a sense as to other members of Congress who also had their names
included either on the list or in his notes. I mean he apparently had a lot of
notes with a lot of names. It's not clear if he had addresses for some of us and
so you know it's the question I think at some point I'd like answered is, you know, was there a reason and and what was that reason?
Also, you know, is my name on any other list?
I just we are for security purposes.
I'd like to I'd like to know.
And, you know, but look, the bigger picture here has nothing to do with me.
It has to do with me.
It has to do with our country.
We're going to be one last question on the process and then we'll get to that.
Sorry.
I'm terrible.
Um, when you find out you're on the list on Sunday morning, I mean, you obviously make
a host of calls to family, friends and colleagues.
Um, why we actually didn't, I think you didn't.
Now, did you tell leadership or I mean, what think. You didn't. Did you tell leadership?
I mean, what do you do in that moment?
In that moment, it's your family.
That's it.
And I don't want to get in the way of law enforcement.
I don't want to mess with whatever it is they're doing.
So we reached out to local police,
got the security that we were told know, were told we we probably
needed just just to be safe.
They were wonderful.
We have our local cops are phenomenal people.
I've known them for a long time because I was at City Hall here.
So just the best.
And, and then we waited.
I let my you know, my I let my family, a couple members of the family know,
but we didn't want any of this to get out
because we have no idea what it would have done
to the investigation and the work to get him,
which he finally did on Sunday night.
All right, let's talk big picture
because one of the things that really,
I think upset a lot of people
Obviously the biggest tragedy was what happened but then to see it sort of filtered into this incredible
partisan conspiratorial lens
And the way that it was so immediately
Was actually kind of like unsettling for me
and I know we were in a new type of politics and everything kind
of gets distilled this way, but like, I, I just found it almost like upsetting,
uh, in a visceral way to watch it happen.
And you knew that you were on the list before you went public saying I'm on the
list, so you knew for a period of time that you were on the list and then you
had to watch as members of Congress, Mike Lee in particular, talks about how this is,
you know, leftism and Marxism gone run amok.
I just, I can't, I would love to know what was going through
your head as you watched that.
I just wanted him caught.
I know, of course.
Yeah.
You know, like we, uh, we were all just all just sort of, you know, as a family unit on our phones, just sort of refreshing the news at, you know, hoping and ultimately being very, very relieved when he was when he was caught. up on my phone and it was the first time I saw that image of the guy in the mask or whatever that thing is.
And a few hours later, because of that,
I thought about, I was like,
is that what I'm gonna see if he pops out of my backyard?
So yeah, I was so disturbed by it
when I sort of got around to thinking about the reactions.
I really want people to appreciate, like, they don't have to make this partisan.
This doesn't have to be anything other than a very unwell person who was radicalized somewhere, probably online.
who was radicalized somewhere, probably online, and, uh, and he went and killed people.
And, and, and our responsibility as elected officials is to be bigger and better and, and, and show kindness and, and empathy.
And to say, you know, we are in this together. We are all Americans and we want a better politics.
Why do you think it's so tough for that to happen these days?
I, I don't know.
I think part of it is just the way the, you know, social media works and, you
know, the instant gratification you get from, you know, put something,
something like they're on online.
Maybe he raises money off of it.
It, you know, I don don't I don't really know. I just hope that
Mike Lee wakes up tomorrow and says you know what? I'm gonna be part of the solution
I'm going to say hey look no one deserves this
Political violence has to end I'm gonna be more careful with my rhetoric
And you know, I hope the president calls the governor and does what all
presidents used to do or what previous presidents always did,
which was to lead and say like, we're all going to work together.
I'm going to make sure everyone has all the resources they need.
We're going to be there for one another.
And we're going to look forward and say,
what are all the things that we got to to be there for one another. And we're going to look forward and say, what are all the things
that we got to do to end this?
Right.
I like to see that.
Yeah, because I mean, one conversation is happening, which is like, well, we need
more resources towards security for lawmakers and clearly that would be helpful.
Um, but that doesn't really quite get at the root here.
Um, and I don't really know how to get at the root here.
I don't know if you have ideas.
I've been thinking about it a lot, uh, cause even before this, uh, we, we had
protesters sleeping outside of our house for days, I've had, uh, you know,
priest alarming threats come into the office.
Um, threats made to me when I've been out in public, I think there needs to be an additional sort of piece of infrastructure on Capitol Hill,
where all of the data and the various law enforcement agencies are sort of in, come
together, a sort of war room, if you will.
And that doesn't require additional spend necessarily.
It just means putting some folks in a room together.
And we see that we have something like that here. doesn't require additional spend necessarily. It just means putting some folks in a room together.
And we see that we have something like that here in Cincinnati where people are looking at all of
the data. It's coming into a central place and you're able to make quicker decisions, better
decisions. And then, you know, obviously increase. When you're back home, I think that there has to be a real reckoning with these social
media companies in terms of what's allowed and what's not allowed, what gets handed over
to law enforcement.
And I do think there should be some sort of pledge that elected officials take that says,
no, we're going to we're going to actually lean into our, our shared humanity.
Uh, we're going to disagree with each other and we're going to be forceful
about our disagreements because we're people of conviction, but we're not
going to cross the line and, you know, and, and everyone should expect their
lawmaker, their elected official to, to, to be part of that.
Last question.
Um, one of the things that's sort of, um, a secondary outcome of this is that I or their elected official to be part of that. Last question.
One of the things that's sort of a secondary outcome of this is that I think people who are smart
and motivated and idealistic even,
maybe like why would I wanna get involved
in public service?
Like it's already kind of a shit show
and then on top of that it's a threat, frankly.
Puts a target on me. What do you say to those people?
I understand but the country needs good people. This is public service. This is serving your
country and it's hard. Everything that matters and has real meaning is hard.
matters and has real meaning is hard. So, you know, but it is something that can produce a lot of good.
I mean, over the course of the last few years, I've I'm new to politics, elected politics. You know, I was at City Hall for five years in Congress, this is my third year. You know, I've been part of pretty big change. I
mean, Cincinnati is the only city in the country that has two years of quality preschool.
I helped lead that with comprehensive eviction prevention work.
Cincinnati has kept tens of thousands of people
in their homes.
Last year in Congress, I forced a vote with others
on the Social Security Fairness Act.
And now you've got all these public retirees, teachers,
firefighters, letter carriers,
they're getting all of their social security. It's like six, seven hundred, eight hundred dollars a month
to help them pay their bills.
So like it is worth it.
It is worth it.
And, you know, the more good people get involved in politics, the better.
So I, you know, this is all of this is one of those moments
where the country does need people.
Now, I hear you.
You didn't even mention the biggest accomplishment of Cincinnati, Skyline Chile.
Why didn't do anything with skyline?
Well, you have a you produce the city produces.
That's for another YouTube.
Congressman, I'm really grateful that, well, not grateful that you had to go through this.
I'm grateful you made it through this.
And hopefully, I just want to be clear.
As you know, because I don't want to- he never left Minnesota.
It's just we didn't-
I know, but it's still frightening.
I mean, it's still pretty frightening.
So I'm sorry you had to go through this.
Let's put it that way.
And please keep us posted on these things.
We'll love to have you back on in better circumstances than this one.
But I do appreciate the conversation.
Congressman Greg Landsman of Ohio. Thank you so much and thank you guys for tuning in. As
always, subscribe to the feed where you get great conversations like this.