
Both President and Media Shine Brightly After D.C. Correspondents’ Dinner Shooting
For one brief shining moment — one that will hopefully endure — both President Trump and the media, U.S. and European, came together in response to an incident that could have led to tragic consequences. The event, as most of the world now knows, was the White House Correspondents’ Dinner honoring the First Amendment, with President Trump as the principal speaker. As the gathered guests began the first dinner course at about 8:36 p.m. ET, gunshots rang out, and police and Secret Service sprang into action. It turns out that the gunshots accompanied the attempted break-in of the dinner by an assailant armed with a shotgun, a handgun, and “multiple knives,” as police reported. The assailant was later identified as Cole Tomas Allen, 31, of Torrance, California. He was a registered guest at the Washington Hilton Hotel, where the event was being staged. Trump, who was whisked off the dais after the gunshots, actually wanted the dinner to continue after the incident, but the Secret Service decided that that was not a good idea. Instead, Trump went back to the White House to hold a press conference. “In light of this evening’s events, I ask all Americans to recommit to
Both President and Media Shine Brightly After D.C. Correspondents’ Dinner Shooting
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