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Did Biden’s Anti-Trump Rhetoric Spark Violence? GOP Thinks So…

Did Biden’s Anti-Trump Rhetoric Spark Violence? GOP Thinks So

House Speaker Mike Johnson stated on Sunday that the “heated political environment” is a result of President Joe Biden’s political assaults on former President Donald Trump, and that Biden should be “called out” for them.

After Trump was shot at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, he asked political leaders from both parties to “turn the rhetoric down” the next morning.

This nation needs to cool down, Johnson remarked on NBC’s “Today” program. For the sake of moving ahead and preserving the free society to which we are all privileged, it is imperative that leaders from all sides of the aisle speak out against this and see to it that it is rectified.



Just over four months remain until the presidential election this year, and he went on to mention the Democratic criticism of Trump.

According to the Republican from Louisiana, “the environment heats up” when there is a persistent messaging that suggests electing Trump will be harmful to democracy and lead to the end of the republic. That is not possible for us to do. That is just not true. The tone needs to be toned down for everyone.

In remarks that were echoed by the House speaker, numerous other Republicans—including Trump’s team, a few of his closest congressional allies, and at least one leading candidate for his vice presidential nomination—have voiced their opinions in the lead-up to this week’s nominating convention in Milwaukee.

Along with Trump, one other rallygoer was murdered and two others were seriously wounded in the incident. The FBI has identified the 20-year-old gunman, Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, who was shot and died on the site, and has labeled the shooting as an assassination attempt. According to public records, Crooks was a Republican who had given a minor amount to a nonprofit that was affiliated with Democrats in 2021. Officials from the police department have stated that they have not yet discovered any motive-inspiring writings or social media posts.

Anger over what Republicans saw as years of Democratic persecution of Trump and his supporters erupted in the moments following the failed assassination attempt at Trump’s rally on Saturday in Butler, Pennsylvania. Republicans were energised by a bloodied Trump’s defiant fist pump as Secret Service agents escorted him off stage.

Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio, who is being considered as a possible vice presidential candidate by Trump, blamed Biden’s statements on X soon after the shooting.

The events of today are hardly an exception. “We must stop President Trump at all costs,” he declared, stating that this was the fundamental premise of the Biden campaign. “That language was the direct cause of the attempted assassination of President Trump.”

This was an assassination attempt assisted and abetted by the radical Left and corporate media continually calling Trump a menace to democracy, Nazis, or worse,” said South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, another possible vice presidential nominee and key Trump backer, on X.

As Trump’s campaign manager Chris LaCivita put it on X, “the best way is through the ballot box” to hold Biden, Democratic funders, and leftist activists accountable for their “disgusting” remarks directed at Trump over the years.

According to Johnson, LaCivita, and others, Biden recently urged Democrats to stop talking about whether the 81-year-old president should leave the race after his poor performance in the June presidential debate and instead focus on defeating Trump. This was done during a private call with donors.

We have concluded our discussion of the debate. According to Biden, “it’s time to put Trump in the bullseye” during that call, which AWN was able to retrieve from the audio.

A few days ago, President Biden stated, “It’s time to put a bullseye on Trump.” According to Johnson, who spoke on Sunday’s NBC “Today” show, “that kind of language on either side should be called out,” even though he didn’t intend the inferred meaning. “It needs to stop there. We can have strong debates, but we must make it clear that this is our system.”

Several statements made by Republicans in Congress were more divisive.

Texas Representative Keith Self criticized Joe Biden on X, saying, “Every American should be outraged at Joe Biden for inciting violence against Donald J. Trump.” Self was referring to Biden’s “bullseye” comment.

Among Trump’s frequent use of violent imagery is his threat of a “bloodbath” in the event that Biden is elected in November. In an attempt to reverse the 2020 election results in light of Trump’s baseless accusations of extensive fraud, his followers stormed the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, attacking police officers and destroying doors and windows. An intruder attacked the husband of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with a hammer at their San Francisco home in 2022, and the former president has criticized him for it.

In addition to claiming that Biden would destroy US boundaries, the former president frequently asserts that Biden is the true enemy of democracy. “We probably won’t have a country left anymore, that’s how bad it is,” Trump said in the June debate, restating an assertion that is a mainstay of his rallies and speeches.

The vice president made his remarks Saturday night from Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, after claiming to have been “thoroughly briefed” about the massacre.

What a horrible sort of violence; it has no home in the United States. According to the president, it’s ill. It’s a reason why we need to bring this nation together. This must not be allowed to continue. No way can we act in such a way. It is unacceptable to us.

Trump and Biden had a phone conversation on Saturday night. The call was “good” and “short and respectful,” according to a source who was briefed on it. The call was “brief and respectful,” according to a senior White House official who was also briefed on it.

According to the person, Biden reaffirmed his stance that political violence had no place or tolerance and informed him that he was directing agencies to conduct a thorough inquiry.

After the shooting, Democrats temporarily suspended their political attacks on Trump. On Saturday night, Biden’s team halted all contacts and television ads.

A campaign spokesman said that in light of the tragedy, Vice President Kamala Harris decided to delay her visit to Florida. It was her original intention to go to Palm Beach on Tuesday to participate in a moderated discussion with other Republican women on Trump’s position on reproductive rights for women.

In the aftermath of the assassination attempt, Democrats across the party, including the Biden campaign, were frantically trying to figure out how to modify their counter-messaging strategies for the Republican National Convention on Sunday.



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