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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Wilson will shut yap to avoid flap

Congressman vows ‘You lie!’ was one-time outburst

Wilson
James Rosen McClatchy

WASHINGTON – When President Barack Obama addresses a joint session of Congress tonight, there’ll be no shout-out this time.

At least, not from Rep. Joe Wilson.

The South Carolina Republican yelled “You lie!” at Obama on Sept. 9 as the president addressed Congress on live, prime-time television.

Not this time, Wilson said Tuesday.

“That was a one-time incident,” he told McClatchy Newspapers. “I will continue, through my agreement with the White House, to discuss issues civilly.”

Wilson, a fifth-term lawmaker who was a military attorney before he joined Congress, said he had a nice conversation with Barack and Michelle Obama at a White House holiday party last month for members of Congress.

Neither Obama nor Wilson brought up the lawmaker’s outburst, even in jest.

“I have high respect for the president and the first lady,” Wilson said Tuesday.

Wilson apologized to White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel in a midnight call immediately after Obama’s address on his health care overhaul.

In the following days, as the shout got global news coverage, Obama and his aides repeatedly said they had accepted Wilson’s apology.

Aides to Obama declined to discuss the incident Tuesday.

The yell catapulted Wilson from being an unknown outside South Carolina to a hero among conservative activists, who have flooded his re-election campaign with contributions.

The flap also benefited Rob Miller, Wilson’s Democratic opponent in the November elections.

Wilson and Miller raised a combined $4.75 million through Sept. 30, an astounding $4.34 million of it in the 21 days after Wilson’s outburst.

The fundraising total already has set a record for a U.S. House of Representatives campaign in South Carolina, and the Wilson-Miller race could challenge the nationwide record.

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee recently named the Wilson-Miller contest one of the 17 most important in the country.

Wilson said it was hard to put the “You lie!” incident behind him, partly because he still got asked about it all the time.

“Every five minutes,” Wilson said when he was asked how often the yell is brought up. “People say they’re very supportive. Truly, hundreds of thousands of people have communicated with our office, with me, with our family. I’m grateful they understand that I’m a gentleman.”

His newfound legions of supporters, he said, “understand my passion, and they appreciate that I’m continuing to speak out at the proper time and place.”

With that, he was off to deliver a “one-minute,” a short speech on the House floor.

“Where are the jobs?” Wilson asked in the nearly empty chamber. “This is the question I continue to ask this liberal majority since they persistently push a job-killing agenda.”

He didn’t mention Obama.