How Greg Gianforte won Montana's special election — despite an assault charge

Timing, it seems, is everything

Greg Gianforte speaks to supporters
(Image credit: Getty Images)

One of the persistent clichés in politics is that campaigns and elections are all about "momentum." It's an elusive and hard-to-quantify commodity that candidates will loudly and proudly declare to have in their possession, even when — especially when — they do not. That cliché got a thoroughly bizarre twist this week when the special election for Montana's at-large congressional seat came down to literal, Newtonian momentum: specifically, the mass and velocity of Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs as he was being thrown to the ground by Republican candidate Greg Gianforte.

Everything about the incident was irredeemably ugly. Jacobs asked Gianforte for his response to the Congressional Budget Office's scoring of the Republican health-care bill, which apparently was so enraging to Gianforte that he slammed Jacobs to the ground and screamed "get the hell out of here." Jacobs called the police and was taken to the hospital for x-rays. Gianforte and his aides, after leaving the scene, put out a lie-filled statement about the incident in which they brazenly attempted to pin blame on Jacobs and cast Gianforte as the victim. He was later charged with misdemeanor assault.

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Simon Maloy

Simon Maloy is a political writer and researcher in Washington, DC. His work has been published by The Huffington Post, The American Prospect, and Salon.