By Jeffery Blehar
Thursday, July 18, 2024
The first presidential debate between President Joe Biden
and former president Donald Trump will be remembered for years, if not decades
— but ironically enough not for anything anyone said during it. The phrase
“whrzza? wuh?” probably best captures Biden’s overall performance; there were
no memorable one-liners or destined-to-be-historic quotes. (On second thought,
the sentence “We finally beat Medicare!” deserves to be carved on Biden’s
political tombstone.) I do remember Trump landing one clean hit, however: the moment he asked why in God’s name Biden was terminally
incapable of firing anyone, despite reeling from one mortifying
scandal — the border crisis, the drug crisis, self-inflicted runaway inflation,
the catastrophic Afghanistan withdrawal, the mysterious disappearance of the
defense secretary — to the next. “He doesn’t fire people. He never fired
people. I’ve never seen him fire anybody. I did fire a lot.”
Set aside the fact that — despite his Apprentice reputation
— Trump was famously wimpy about firing anyone face-to-face during his
administration. (You would get knifed, sure, but always in the back, by a third
party, and with a bucket of slop upended over your stiffened corpse as the
coroner wheeled you to the morgue.) It was a good point when Trump said it — I
remember noting as much in the moment — and it has become acutely, urgently
relevant since then: Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle must be fired
immediately, and her termination must be an act of public shaming and public
transparency. No gold watch, no kind thanks for years of service — not this
time. (An apology to the nation would be a start, though.)
For it is becoming increasingly clear that the United
States Secret Service, through multiple astonishing, overlapping failures and
serial acts of negligence, nearly got Donald Trump murdered on stage last week.
The agency’s failure is total: A man is dead, two others were injured, the
president was injured, and the social fabric of the country came within one
lucky head-tilt of being rent asunder. And nobody is being held accountable for
it. President Biden cannot bring himself to fire the Secret Service director
even amid the escalating revelations of professional incompetence surrounding
the worst and most fatal presidential security failure since the days of Dealey
Plaza and the Ambassador Hotel. No, Biden in fact retains complete confidence
in her, just as he retains complete confidence in everyone else who has ever
worked for this administration — with the exception perhaps of Sam Brinton.
Outrageous new facts emerge every day. We now discover
that the shooter had been identified as a suspicious-acting “person of
interest” by law enforcement well over an hour before Donald Trump took the
stage. We now discover that he had been spotted mounting the roof he shot from
and identified as a “threat” a full ten minutes in advance of Trump’s taking the stage.
During those ten minutes, an entire group of Secret Service and local
law-enforcement agents were placed underneath the very building the
shooter used. In the most infuriating statement of all, Cheatle blamed the
potential hazardousness of that building’s gently “sloped roof” for the fact that Secret Service and law
enforcement were clustered underneath it while not a single man was placed atop
it. (The sloped roof clearly did not trouble the shooter.) Cheatle says she is
terribly sorry for all this dreadful, fatal incompetence, and that of course
the situation is “unacceptable,” which is an accurate enough characterization
in its own way: She clearly believes that taking responsibility for any of this
is unacceptable, and has thus stubbornly refused to resign. The Biden administration is backing her
up.
It’s important to avoid conspiracy-theorizing right now,
not just because it’s wrong but because it will be used by Democrats and the
Biden administration as a distraction to trivialize or avoid the real problem.
The mountain of accumulated failures that led to the shooting attests directly
to a Secret Service whose internal standards have collapsed. And it is nothing
new — as bad as Cheatle is, with her reported focus on DEI and relaxation of
job standards, the present situation is merely the culmination of a long
history of scandalous behavior that tends to get swept under the rug by
lawmakers. Dominic Pino addressed this brilliantly on the day of the shooting,
noting the shockingly long list of failures overseen by the Secret Service
dating all the way back to the early years of the Obama administration. Since
that time, White House gala-crashers, prostitution and pedophilia scandals,
leaks against congressional enemies, and a procession of fence-jumpers (one of
whom got all the way inside the White House) have all disgraced the reputation
of the agency.
So if there’s any conspiracy at play, it’s the most
drearily obvious one: a conspiracy to hide just how dangerously incompetent the
Secret Service has become at executing its most mission-critical task. (When
you allow a shooter to set up shop directly over your head for ten whole
minutes, you are officially out of excuses.)
Cheatle’s argument as she fights to retain her job is
apparently that it would be — get this — too dangerous to fire her. According to her spokesman,
“continuity of operations is paramount during a critical incident” and
therefore she “has no intentions to step down.” Yes, apparently because the
Secret Service director has proven herself to be staggeringly, fatally incompetent
when it comes to protecting Trump, it is now more important than ever that she
be allowed to continue in the job. Don’t change horses in midstream — why, if
we did that we would run the risk of chaos at the Secret Service in the late
stages of a presidential-election campaign. What we have right now is
apparently a model of regular order.
The assassination attempt in Butler, Pa., was possible
only because of a massively cascading series of systemic law-enforcement
failures from the top to the bottom — federal all the way down to local.
Everyone has a deeply humiliating lesson to learn here. But accountability must
begin at the top, with the men and women directly responsible for protecting
the lives of the president and other high-profile political candidates. If we
simply exhale in relief and whistle past the graveyard, as the Biden administration
would have us do, then mark my words: We will be returning to that graveyard
later to cry over a fresh tombstone — perhaps sooner than you think.
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