“For years, those on the radical left have compared wonderful Americans like Charlie to Nazis and the world’s worst mass murderers and criminals,” said Trump, who one day earlier had been face-to-face with protesters in Washington who called him Hitler. “This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible for the terrorism that we’re seeing in our country today.”
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The fact that Trump faced two assassination attempts in 2024 – one of them a near miss at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania – is never far from the minds of his team, and Trump referenced the Butler shooting in his video. A handmade portrait hanging in the White House shows Trump being lifted to his feet on the rally stage in Butler, blood streaming from his ear as he pumped his fist.
Earlier at the White House, the corridors of the press offices – an area where reporters are able to move with relative ease – were quiet, as staff there absorbed news about a man many of them were either close with, or admired.
Televisions affixed to walls in different rooms blared minute-to-minute coverage of Kirk’s shooting and then his death, as well as the ongoing search for the killer. Some staff members appeared to have been crying.
White House flags fly at half-mast after Kirk’s death on Wednesday.Credit: Bloomberg
In the late afternoon, Trump signed a proclamation lowering the flags to half-staff in Kirk’s honour through Sunday. About 5.30 pm, Washington time, a worker in black pants and a black shirt walked to the giant flagpole that Trump had installed on the north lawn and cranked the flag down; he repeated the same move with the flag on top of the White House minutes later.
The president was still on track for a visit to New York on the anniversary of the last significant event to unite nearly all Americans across parties: the September 11 terror attacks.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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