
Rep. Jim Walsh blamed the deep political divide in the country for an assassin’s bullet almost cutting down a former president
Carleen Johnson
The Center Square Washington
Washington State Republican Party Chair Jim Walsh said the way former President Donald Trump responded to Saturday’s assassination attempt secured his re-election.
Walsh, who is also a state representative from Aberdeen, told The Center Square he was in Milwaukee, Wis., at a Brewers game, with other early arriving delegates to the Republican National Convention when he learned of the shooting at a Trump rally in Butler, Pa.
“One of the staffers texted me: the former president has been shot,” Walsh said.
“It wasn’t so much shock, as it was dread,” he continued. “We’ve been dreading something like this happening for years, really.”
Walsh blamed the deep political divide in the country for an assassin’s bullet almost cutting down a former president.
“I attribute this to the intense vitriolic hatred that people in politics and people in what I call the elite establishment media have toward this man, Donald Trump,” he explained. “Some of these groups have said the most hateful things about Trump, that he’s a fascist and a dictator and a threat to democracy, for years.”
Walsh lamented that such rhetoric could sway an unstable person to act, adding such talk must stop.
He then pivoted to wondering why the shooter, who shot from a nearby rooftop, wasn’t taken about before getting several shots off.
“The video seems to indicate that the counter snipers were hesitant, and I don’t know if that’s because they were told to hesitate or just as individuals had a moment where they weren’t sure what to do,” Walsh said. “That’s what has to come out in an official investigation.”
He said it was “by God’s providence Trump wasn’t killed, but he could have been.”
Walsh thinks the assassination attempt will impact the presidential election.
“Donald Trump got re-elected Saturday,” Walsh predicted. “Those photos of him with blood on his face and his fist in the air, and the blue sky and the American flag behind him; I mean, that is an iconic picture.”
Walsh said security at the RNC has been increased in the aftermath of Saturday’s assassination attempt.
“There are more cadres of police and law enforcement and not from Milwaukee or Wisconsin,” he noted. “And not even from neighboring states like Minnesota or Illinois, but there was a group from Florida here, so they are drawing police units from all over the place.”
As to potential security lapses in Saturday’s shooting, Walsh said he expects there will be consequences.
“Secret Service knows they will have to do a better job because some of the Secret Service management, it’s gonna fall on them, and that’s probably rightly so,” Walsh said. “You do this rationally, and if heads have to roll, you do that after you determine which the right heads are.”
This report was first published by The Center Square Washington.
Also read:
- Clark County mourns loss of hometown hero and humanitarian Greg BiffleClark County is mourning Greg Biffle, the Camas High School graduate and NASCAR champion remembered not only for his racing career but for his humanitarian work and disaster relief efforts.
- Opinion: IBR still holding and lying about coming billions in cost overrunsJoe Cortright argues that Interstate Bridge Replacement officials are deliberately delaying the release of an updated cost estimate that he says could push the project toward $10 billion.
- Opinion: Another problem with strike pay from the UI fund – Potential double-dipping, overpaymentsElizabeth New (Hovde) argues that Washington’s new strike pay law risks overpayments and double-dipping unless workers are clearly warned at the point of applying for unemployment benefits.
- Vancouver firefighters spread Christmas cheer through 2nd annual toy driveVancouver firefighters collected and distributed more than 650 donated toys to students at six Evergreen Public School District elementary schools during their second annual holiday toy drive.
- Person rescued after jumping from I-205 BridgeVancouver fire crews and a Port of Portland rescue boat pulled a man from the Columbia River after he jumped from the I-205 Bridge and rushed him to a local hospital.
- Weather update: Heavy rains and strong wind gusts expected for the rest of ThursdayHeavy rain, wind gusts up to 45 mph, and ongoing flood risks are forecast for Southwest Washington as utilities continue restoring power after earlier storm damage.
- BPA responding to widespread weather-related outagesBonneville Power Administration crews are responding to more than 40 transmission outages caused by extreme weather across the Northwest.








