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After third assassination attempt, debate grows over whether Trump attack warrants another investigation

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When a bullet grazed President Donald Trump’s ear, Congress immediately launched investigations into how a gunman was able to pull the trigger. Two attempts later, and lawmakers are now less interested in taking swift action.

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There have been few calls to hold hearings or launch probes into the latest incident as conspiracies swirl online after the third alleged assassination attempt over the weekend at the White House Correspondent’s Association Dinner.

«I just happen to think it’s — for the most part, it’s a waste of time,» Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., told Fox News Digital. «Security held. The guy didn’t get through. Wasn’t even close.»

REPUBLICANS EYE PICKING UP $400M TAB FOR TRUMP’S BALLROOM AS SOME DEMS OPEN TO ‘DISCUSS’ IDEA

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Unlike the first assassination attempt against President Donald Trump, Republicans aren’t rushing to hold public hearings and launch investigations into the latest attempt on his life at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner over the weekend. (Reuters/Bo Erickson)

Top lawmakers on the House Oversight and Senate Judiciary committees met with Secret Service Director Sean Curran this week for briefings, but have so far stopped short of calling for hearings or full-scale investigations.

Two years ago, when a gunman tried and failed to assassinate Trump on the campaign trail in Butler, Pennsylvania, two major bipartisan investigations were launched to address failures by the Secret Service and other agencies and find out how a gunman got so close to ending Trump’s life.

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And in the case of Ryan Routh, who was caught with a rifle in another attempt against Trump while he was golfing at his club in Florida just months after the shooting at Butler, lawmakers folded that investigation in with their ongoing inquiry into the first attack.

Following the weekend shooting at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association (WHCA) Dinner, where a gunman was foiled while attempting to enter a packed ballroom where Trump, his Cabinet, Vice President JD Vance and several journalists sat, lawmakers aren’t rushing to figure out what happened this time.

Trump’s appearance on Saturday marks the first time he decided to go to the dinner while serving as president — he has been twice in the past. He also promised at a press conference after the dinner was canceled to reschedule the event within the next 30 days.

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The alleged shooter, Cole Allen, bolted past a security check point with a rifle, handgun and several knives on his person. But the Secret Service was able to neutralize the suspect before he ever entered the ballroom where Trump was sitting.

Still, some Republicans are demanding that the incident be given a thorough review, or at least a hearing.

REPUBLICANS SCRAMBLE TO FUND SECRET SERVICE AFTER TRUMP ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT AMID RECORD-BREAKING SHUTDOWN

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Sen. Josh Hawley questioning officials during Senate hearing in Capitol Hill office building

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., questions acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. and Deputy FBI Director Paul Abbate during a joint Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security and Government Affairs committees hearing in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on July 30, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

«I mean, this is the third assassination attempt on the life of the president in two years,» Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., told Fox News Digital. «You know, we need to look carefully at all of the procedures and protocols.»

Hawley wants Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chair Rand Paul, R-Ky., to hold a hearing on presidential security in the aftermath of the shooting.

The very same committee led an investigation into the Butler attempt and determined that the shooting was preventable and caused by a series of failures in security protocol, planning and funding, among several others.

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The bipartisan investigation landed on more than 40 recommendations for actions that should be taken in the future to prevent a repeat.

Paul didn’t appear ready to rush into a hearing on the matter. He told Fox News Digital that lawmakers investigated that attempt for over a year and believed that the probe «arrived at several bits of wisdom, insight, and advice.»

«I think there will be items from this that need to be reviewed and made better,» Paul said. «We’re gonna get a briefing from the Secret Service on what to learn from this attempt, and we’ll decide after that if we need to do anything further. But absolutely, the Secret Service needs to investigate and see what they can do to make the president safer.»

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REPUBLICANS RUSH TO GREEN-LIGHT WHITE HOUSE BALLROOM FOLLOWING THIRD TRUMP ASSASSINATION SCARE

Like Hawley, Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., has several questions about how a gunman was able to blow past security measures and fears what could come next.

«When is it going to be a suicide bomber? When is it going to be an army of people behind the one person that went in and blow up the whole building? Look, that’s where we are, and I have questions about the three assassination attempts,» Norman told Fox News Digital.

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Sen. Rand Paul talking to reporters outside the Senate Chamber at the U.S. Capitol.

Sen. Rand Paul talks to reporters before entering the Senate Chamber to vote at the U.S. Capitol on March 4, 2026. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, there is a growing wave of skepticism online about whether the latest attempt on Trump’s life was even real. Many users are claiming that the incident was «staged.»

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Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, told Fox News Digital that «some of these people need… serious help.»

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Moreno was comfortable that White House chief of staff Susie Wiles would lead a «necessary and important conversation» about the correspondents’ dinner incident, but rebuked any attempt by Democrats to push for answers.

«If there’s a Democrat having that conversation, you can shut the f— up given that they won’t fund [the Department of Homeland Security],» Moreno said.

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‘America First’ immigration overhaul bill would codify Trump’s campaign promises once and for all

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FIRST ON FOX: President Donald Trump’s ‘America First’ immigration overhaul would be codified into law under a House Republican bill that would significantly narrow legal immigration pathways by shifting the system toward high-skilled workers, eliminating most family sponsorship categories and ending the diversity visa lottery.

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Immigration — both illegal and legal — remains a contentious topic in Washington, with Democrats pushing to expand pathways for migrants to obtain citizenship, while Trump and his Republican allies are seeking to restrict migration, including proposals such as ending birthright citizenship.

Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., introduced the Americans First Immigration Act, which would amend several key provisions in the Immigration and Nationality Act, in an effort to «putting American citizens first.»

«My bill draws a hard line – the days of putting illegals, random diversity lotteries and foreign labor ahead of American workers are over,» Moore said in a statement to Fox News Digital. «Our immigration system should serve the American people, not undercut them, and that means selecting individuals who will strengthen our economy, respect our laws, and share our values.»

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FEDERAL JUDGE THROWS OUT BIDEN ADMIN PROGRAM TO LEGALIZE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SPOUSES OF US CITIZENS

Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., participates in the House Judiciary Committee organizing meeting in the Rayburn House Office Building on Feb. 1, 2023. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. via Getty Images)

The 70-page bill seeks to codify many of the actions already taken by the Trump administration to tighten legal immigration pathways. In December 2025, President Donald Trump paused the green card lottery program in the wake of two shootings on college campuses, and last September, Trump signed an executive order placing restrictions on the issuance of H1B1 visas, a work visa offered for specialty occupations.

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«If you want to come to the United States, you should earn it through merit, not diversity lotteries or loopholes. The Americans First Immigration Act restores fairness and accountability by protecting American jobs, prioritizing the nuclear family and ensuring that every immigrant admitted is prepared to contribute and succeed,» Moore told Fox News Digital.

While Moore’s bill seeks to end the diversity lottery visa, it includes a provision to ensure that the allotment of visas for religious workers, equal to 3,000 a year, is preserved.

President Donald Trump signing an executive order in the Oval Office at the White House

President Donald Trump signed two executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 19, 2025. The orders established the «Trump Gold Card» visa program and introduced a $100,000 fee for H-1B visas. The «Trump Gold Card» allows foreign nationals permanent residency and a pathway to U.S. citizenship for a $1 million investment in the United States. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

‘SHAMEFUL’: LEGAL IMMIGRANTS FACE UPHILL BATTLE AMID ONGOING BORDER CRISIS

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Julie Kirchner, a senior advisor at the America First Policy Institute, supports Moore’s bill, particularly the measure to eliminate lottery visas.

«The Visa Lottery has a long, documented history of fraud and national security concerns and should be abolished. Under a merit-based, America First system, any immigrant would have to demonstrate their skills, ability to assimilate, and how they will contribute to the U.S.,» Kirchner told Fox News Digital.

One of the other provisions in Moore’s bill seeks to put «American workers first» by overhauling the current employment-based immigration visa program and replacing it with a points-based merit system. Under the new points-based system, applicants are ranked and will receive points on factors such as their level of English proficiency, education, their level of compensation, military service and age. All applicants must have a salary that is at least 200% above the median wage of the state they’ll reside in, and they must meet English proficiency requirements.

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REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK: GOP PUSHES ELECTION SECURITY BILL DESPITE SLIM ODDS, AS TRUMP PRESSURE LOOMS

Employers must also prove that they «took good faith steps» in recruiting American workers for the job offered to the foreign worker for equal compensation. The legislation also requires employers to share with the government the name and contact information of American workers who were offered the job and their offered wage. The Department of Labor will oversee and investigate compliance.

And migrants offered a visa are required to sign a petition pledging they support the U.S. Constitution and its values. The pledge also includes a requirement to disavow political groups or social groups that partake in honor killings, female infanticide or genital mutilation.

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A person holding a passport and visa documents

The Trump administration says foreign student visa vetting will be a continued process rather than a one-time check. (iStock)

«Ideally the government has the information in advance to bar these people from immigrating to the U.S.,» Kirchner said. «However, if a newly-arrived immigrant engages in behavior that demonstrates the statements he made to our immigration agencies were false, that can become the basis for deportation or denaturalization.»

The act would also curtail family-sponsored immigration to only be accessible to spouses of U.S. citizens, minor children, spouses of green card holders and children of green card holders. Parents, siblings, and adult children of U.S. citizens are barred.

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«What the bill does is eliminate the ability of extended family members to get a preference under the law,» Kirchner said. «Extended family members can still apply – but they would have to do so based on their own skills, merit, and ability to assimilate.»

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Russia built global recruitment pipeline targeting vulnerable migrants for Ukraine war: report

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Russia has built what human rights investigators describe as a global pipeline recruiting vulnerable foreign nationals into its war against Ukraine, drawing tens of thousands from more than 130 countries through what groups allege are coercive, deceptive and in some cases trafficking-like practices.

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After suffering major battlefield losses and seeking to avoid another politically risky domestic mobilization, Moscow institutionalized a worldwide recruitment system targeting some of the world’s most vulnerable populations to sustain its war machine, a new report by the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), Truth Hounds and the Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights argues. 

Russia has recruited at least 27,000 foreign nationals since February 2022 from countries across Central and South Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America, according to the report. Ukrainian authorities cited in the report project that Russia could recruit another 18,500 foreign nationals in 2026 alone, which would mark the highest annual total since the full-scale invasion began.

AS WAR LOSSES NEAR 2 MILLION, RUSSIA ACCUSED OF TRAFFICKING FOREIGN RECRUITS FROM AFRICA, ASIA

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Nationals of African countries sit in a section of a detention center holding foreign fighters captured while serving in the Russian army on the Ukrainian front in western Ukraine on Nov. 26, 2025. (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)

«This report highlights something fundamental: that the use of foreign fighters by Russia is neither a marginal nor a spontaneous phenomenon. Russia has built a global recruitment system that deliberately targets the most vulnerable populations — undocumented migrants, detainees, precarious workers, or even foreign students — across dozens of countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America,» said Alexis Deswaef, president of the International Federation for Human Rights. 

«Many of these men knew in some capacity what they were signing up for. But some were also deceived or coerced. But in all cases, it is a State that has instrumentalised them as part of its war machine and sent them to the most dangerous positions on the frontline.»

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The report’s central allegation is that Russia’s recruitment apparatus extends far beyond traditional mercenary networks and instead functions as a state-enabled global system that exploits poverty, legal vulnerability and migration insecurity.

Investigators say recruitment evolved from relying primarily on ideologically motivated volunteers early in the war to a broader institutionalized model by mid-2023, after Russia expanded legal eligibility for foreign nationals, eased language and residency requirements, and offered citizenship and financial incentives in exchange for service.

NORTH KOREAN LABORERS DESCRIBE BRUTAL FORCED LABOR IN RUSSIA: «WORKING LIKE A COW, EARNING NOTHING»

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Nationals of African countries watching television in a detention center in western Ukraine

Nationals of African countries watch television in a detention center in western Ukraine holding foreign fighters captured while serving with Russian forces on the Ukrainian front on Nov. 26, 2025. (Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images)

In some cases, according to the report, migrants inside Russia were allegedly pressured to enlist through raids, detention threats, document confiscation, fabricated criminal charges and abuse. Outside Russia, recruits were often allegedly lured through promises of civilian jobs, noncombat positions or pathways to Europe, only to be routed into military contracts they often could not read.

Of 16 prisoners of war interviewed for the report, 13 said they were told they would not be required to fight, but were later deployed to frontline positions, often within weeks.

The report also alleges many foreign recruits were funneled into so-called «meat assaults» — high-risk frontal attacks associated with severe casualty rates. Ukrainian estimates cited in the report say at least 3,388 foreign fighters have been killed, with some estimates suggesting one in five recruits may not survive deployment.

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HEGSETH WARNS RUSSIA AS SIGNS POINT TO MOSCOW SHARING INTEL WITH IRAN 

A Russian service member standing next to a mobile recruitment center in Rostov-on-Don

A Russian service member stands next to a mobile recruitment center for military service under contract in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, Sept. 17, 2022. (Sergey Pivovarov/Reuters)

«Despite the fact that many states are taking measures to curb recruitment, and although Russia claims it is no longer recruiting citizens from certain countries, the predatory recruitment continues. Ukrainian authorities predict that in 2026 Russia will engage more 18,500 foreign nationals, marking the highest annual figure since 2022,» said Maria Tomak, associated researcher and advocacy expert at Truth Hounds.

«This underscores the continued relevance of our report. Our primary objective remains clear: to halt recruitment and to compel Russia to repatriate those already recruited.»

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The report stops short of claiming every foreign fighter was trafficked, noting some enlisted voluntarily for financial gain, but concludes there are reasonable grounds to believe at least some cases meet international definitions of trafficking in persons through deception, coercion and exploitation.

For investigators, the broader concern is that Russia’s war effort may now depend in part on a transnational manpower pipeline that weaponizes global inequality, drawing economically desperate men from around the world into one of Europe’s deadliest conflicts.

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Chechen soldiers in Ukraine

Russian and Chechen soldiers in a devastated Mariupol neighborhood close to the Azovstal frontline.  (Maximilian Clarke/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

The report calls on governments, international organizations and Ukraine’s allies to crack down on recruitment networks, pressure Moscow diplomatically and push for repatriation of foreign nationals already caught in Russia’s military system.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., and Russia’s Defense Ministry for comment but did not receive a response.

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Lobos solitarios, violencia política y resentimiento: qué advierten los expertos después del nuevo intento de ataque a Donald Trump

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Armado con pistolas y cuchillos, Cole Allen, ingeniero de 31 años, saltó los controles de seguridad para llegar al salón donde estaba el presidente Donald Trump y sus principales funcionarios con el objetivo de asesinarlos, según la acusación de los fiscales contra este hombre que resultó detenido antes de que pudiera lograr su cometido, en medio de la cena anual de periodistas acreditados en la Casa Blanca.

No tenía antecedentes penales, había comprado las armas legalmente y sus conocidos, sobre todo sus compañeros de grupos cristianos, dicen que jamás hubieran pensado que Allen, que trabajaba como tutor de alumnos del secundario, era capaz de cometer acto semejante.

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Antes del ataque, el hombre envió a sus familiares un manifiesto en el que intentaba explicar los motivos. “Soy ciudadano de los Estados Unidos de América. Lo que hacen mis representantes me representa a mí. Y ya no estoy dispuesto a permitir que un pedófilo, violador y traidor manche mis manos con sus crímenes”, escribió en aparente referencia a Trump y el caso Epstein. En el documento, Allen intentó refutar posibles observaciones sobre su accionar que le podrían hacer desde el cristianismo.

Es el tercer episodio de violencia que sufre Trump desde hace casi dos años, luego del ataque en Buttler que terminó con una herida en la oreja, y el arresto de otro hombre que buscó dispararle cuando jugaba al golf en Florida. Ninguno de los atacantes tenía antecedentes y nadie sospechaba de una radicalización.

Expertos en violencia política consultados por Clarín como Brian Levin, fundador del Centro para el Estudio del Odio y el Extremismo, señalan que “recientemente hemos observado un cambio, con una creciente diversificación de los delincuentes que planean o ejecutan actos de violencia política en Estados Unidos”.

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Diversificación ideológica

Levin advirtió que “estamos presenciando una diversificación ideológica y una creciente influencia de resentimientos personales en relación con los ataques. Además, en todo el espectro ideológico, vemos más individuos que actúan en solitario, muchos de los cuales experimentan angustia psicológica o emocional situacional. Si bien pueden actuar solos, a menudo forman parte de un ecosistema en línea hostil que refuerza los prejuicios y etiqueta a los enemigos como objetivos legítimos de agresión”.

Kurt Braddock, profesor de Comunicación Pública en American University y especialista en estrategias persuasivas de grupos extremistas, señaló a Clarín que “parece haber un repunte en quienes actúan motivados por la animosidad contra figuras y objetivos de derecha. Cabe aclarar, sin embargo, que en los últimos años, los ataques y los intentos de ataque de la izquierda han sido mucho menos frecuentes que los de la derecha”.

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Según una investigación del año pasado del Center for Estrategic and International Studies (CSIS) “en los últimos años, Estados Unidos ha experimentado un aumento en el número de atentados y complots terroristas de izquierdas, aunque dicha violencia ha aumentado desde niveles muy bajos y sigue siendo mucho menor que los niveles históricos de violencia perpetrada por atacantes de derechas y yihadistas”.

El experto cita un estudio del “Bridging Divides Initiatives” de la Universidad de Princeton, que señala que “el riesgo de violencia política se intensificó el año pasado y continuará empeorando en 2026”, según dijo la directora Shannon Hiller. El reporte advierte que la violencia y las amenazas contra funcionarios y políticos crecen en años electorales. Y señala además que 2026 está en una “peligrosa trayectoria”.

Donald Trump, durante la conferencia de prensa luego del intento de ataque del sábado. Foto: REUTERS

Donald Trump, una figura «polarizante»

Braddock señala que “no existe un perfil estándar de atacante político. Personas de todos los ámbitos, ideologías, religiones y orígenes pueden ser susceptibles a participar en actos de violencia, aunque la decisión de hacerlo es muy poco común, a pesar de los intentos de ataque de alto perfil como el que vimos en la Cena de Corresponsales de la Casa Blanca”.

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Sin embargo, el experto advierte que “Donald Trump es una figura increíblemente polarizante. Desde 2015, ha utilizado una retórica y promovido políticas que algunas personas han interpretado como ataques a sus derechos fundamentales y a su humanidad”.

Y agrega que “este ataque en particular parece haber estado motivado, en parte, por la supuesta relación de Trump con Jeffrey Epstein. Los potenciales atacantes perciben agravios que creen que deben resolverse mediante la violencia. Desafortunadamente, quienes intentan estos ataques parecen creer que son la mejor manera de abordar sus agravios”.

“Creo que es indiscutible que la creciente polarización en Estados Unidos ha llevado a un mayor uso de una retórica que alude al uso de la violencia como medio viable para resolver diferencias políticas. Una vez más, la extrema derecha ha superado a la extrema izquierda en este tipo de lenguaje, pero la izquierda no ha sido inmune a él”, señala.

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Para Erica Frantz, profesora asociada de Ciencias Políticas en Michigan State University, experta en política autoritaria y democratización, “Estados Unidos está experimentando un repunte de la violencia política. Si bien no carece de precedentes históricos, es motivo de preocupación, ya que es síntoma de una democracia debilitada”.

“La insurrección del Capitolio en 2021 fue el detonante de la actual ola de violencia, perpetrada por simpatizantes de derecha de Trump. Dado que Trump y otros miembros de la derecha no condenaron la violencia —e incluso, en cierto modo, la avalaron al indultar a muchos de los perpetradores—, no sorprende que la situación se esté descontrolando”, dijo a Clarín.

“Los extremistas de ambos lados del espectro político ven ahora la violencia como una forma de expresar sus ideas. Para poner fin a este ciclo devastador, es fundamental que nuestros líderes políticos intenten unir a la ciudadanía estadounidense mediante mensajes de unidad, solidaridad y compasión”, agregó.

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El Polarization Research Lab recopiló datos tras el asesinato en septiembre de 2025 del activista conservador Charlie Kirk. Concluyó que menos del 1 por ciento de los estadounidenses consideraba aceptable el asesinato por razones partidistas. «Este rechazo casi total demuestra que no existe una base significativa para la violencia política en Estados Unidos», según su informe.

Sin embargo, sus cifras también indican que más del 90 por ciento de los estadounidenses temen a la violencia política. Casi un tercio dijo que no quería colocar un cartel político en su jardín o una calcomanía en su auto porque temía ser atacado. El reporte señala que, de hecho, este miedo podría ser el efecto colateral de la violencia dirigida contra los líderes del país porque ha fomentado un clima en el que incluso muchos estadounidenses comunes ya no creen que puedan expresar sus ideas políticas y desacuerdos de forma segura.

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