Long before Saturday evening’s shooting at a rally for former President and current presidential candidate Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, America was already on edge. Maybe it’s because November’s election will be the first since the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Maybe it’s because there’s been so much uncertainty about whether the two presumptive nominees would be on the ballot on Election Day — whether Trump’s indictments and convictions would render him ineligible and whether Biden would be replaced by another Democrat.
Long before Saturday evening’s shooting at a rally for presidential candidate Donald Trump, America was already on edge.
November’s election feels more consequential than any one presidential election should ever be. Polarization is off the charts. Supreme Court rulings seem unmoored from precedent — and the Constitution. And polls show that a shockingly high percentage of Americans think violence against one’s political adversaries is justified.
It was in that context Saturday afternoon that we saw Trump reach for his right ear and then duck behind the lectern. And we saw the Secret Service surround him and rush him off the stage. Trump said in a social media post that his upper ear was “pierced” by a bullet. The shooter and one spectator are dead. Two other spectators are wounded, according to the Secret Service.
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris condemned the shooting. Biden, speaking from Delaware, said there was “no place in America for this kind of violence.”
“It’s sick. It’s sick. It’s one of the reasons we have to unite this country,” Biden said. “We cannot condone this.”
The shooter’s identity and motivations remain unknown. But we do know that Americans have had a serious knot in our stomachs for months now, if not for years, about the direction our country is going.
Such dread is likely to only grow stronger the closer we get to November.
Whatever facts emerge, we can count on a significant number of Americans discounting them. Some will discount them because they can’t conceive of something happening the way the evidence suggests that it happened. Others will discount them because they see an opportunity to exploit the event for political gain. In a social media post after Saturday’s event, Rep. Mike Collins, R-Ga., claimed that “Joe Biden sent the orders.” Subsequently — contradicting his previous post — Collins declared that “the Republican District Attorney in Butler County, PA, should immediately file charges against Joseph R. Biden for inciting an assassination.”








