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The Screaming Moderate

Now, will they focus on gun violence?

4/26/2026

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The attempted attack by a potential shooter to kill people at last night’s White House Correspondents Association dinner is just the latest example of violence in our country.

School shootings, church shootings, mass shootings, attempted assassinations of presidents and other public figures – we all are almost desensitized to them.

This one, with no one seriously injured, should be looked at differently, though.

In attendance were media elites and working stiffs, the President, Vice President and a lot of the Cabinet, media corporate bigwigs, House and Senate members and others.

So, journalists and their powerful guests have now experienced a potential mass shooting from the “other side,” as potential targets of such violence which, one hopes, has to affect the way they cover these events going forward. One thing to be an  observer detached from a story, another to be in the story.

As the days go by, we’ll learn more about possible motives of the alleged shooter, of arrangements for such events, and more. We need to learn lessons from it all.

To try, finally, to avoid or at least limit, it happening again.

Having been in that ballroom many times, for this event and others, and knowing the layout of the Washington Hilton, while the alleged shooter clearly planned out his attack, if he had gotten into the ballroom, getting to the President or the front of the room would have been next to impossible with the number of people and tables in the way. Would he have killed people? Most definitely, but he wouldn’t have gotten a shot at the dais, in my opinion.

Early reports are he wanted to harm the President and his administration’s representatives.  Logistically, he likely would killed and wounded others though before he was stopped.

Our society has become violent. We have been desensitized to that violence. Reporters cover the tragedies and then move on to the next big story.

Politicians from all sides leverage the events to push their own favorite gun control, gun decontrol or whatever issues.

It’s a pattern that needs changing.

Talking heads this morning took familiar positions. Trump supporters blamed a violent “left wing.” Non-supporters said it’s a problem on both sides of the political spectrum.

Nothing new there – none were calling for calm and a stop to the finger-pointing at the extremes on both sides.

The truth is such violence knows no single home. It comes from all angles.

President Trump’s reactions to the shooting last night covered the gamut. From saying the right things (honoring the Constitution, bringing people together) and all the wrong things (immediately focusing on his White House ballroom, on how “impactful” presidents become targets for assassination, designating himself as “impactful”).

But let’s not forget the shock those in the hall and those of us watching on television felt. Because that’s what we must take from these events. And where we must demand something be done, finally.

Now the most powerful people in our country and the reporters who cover them have felt what it’s like to be under the attack of a person who is, clearly, mentally disturbed, motivated … and armed. The same way so many mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers and others have been affected over the decades.

The President asked the event be rescheduled. A nice idea but probably not practical. Certainly not at the level it’s been held for the last 100-plus years.  

Still, the purpose of the dinner – the true purpose – is to honor the First Amendment and to award scholarships to students. Those scholarships, that day in the limelight, is something those students earned and deserve. 

Many executives plan trips to DC for months to attend the event, and folks in DC manage their schedules around attending.

Not to mention the millions of dollars the association spends and will have to pay for last night’s cancelled event. The Association doesn’t have a chest of money waiting to be spent. The ticket costs typically pay most of the expenses and scholarships each year.

So, I expect a smaller celebration will be planned.


The President’s immediate focus on the White House ballroom, to me, was inappropriate in addition to being false. For one thing the White House, this one and likely future ones, won’t be renting out that ballroom to private groups, such as the correspondents’ association.

And, even if it found a reason to do so, it won’t be big enough to accommodate them. But it fit Trump’s narrative to direct attention and “need” to his "secure" ballroom. As planned, the new ballroom would seat 650-999 people. Last night’s event attracted a few thousand people. It was a fund-raiser. You don’t skimp on seats if you're raising money. You pack the room.

(By the way, personally I don’t oppose having a larger venue for the White House to hold events, but I don’t like just nonchalantly knocking down the East Wing in the effective dead of night with no notice or adherence to the official, legal process that exists to make changes to the White House.)

Attention also needs to be better paid to the line of succession and who attends what events together. Seems like that President and Vice President needn’t be in the same room (off the White House campus) as often as we’ve seen, for example. At least four of the top five office-holders in the line of succession attended last night.

Let's not end without singing the praises of the Secret Service and law enforcement for the job they did last night. No one was injured in the ball room, the alleged shooter never even got to the door to enter the ballroom.

While the hotel writ large wasn’t secure, a perimeter was established widely enough around the ballroom to provide a tragedy from being a disaster. And the Secret Service, part of the Department of Homeland Security, is not even being paid right now because of political budget disputes on the Hill.

Those men and women performed bravely and unselfishly to protect the President and the hundreds of others in that ballroom.

Let’s hope the rest of the government sees that as a message for how they should perform – putting personal positioning aside for the country’s good.


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Is he lying, mad, or delusional?

4/18/2026

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It’s finally happened, to the Nth degree.

President Trump says we have a deal with Iran. Iran says we don’t.

And, I honestly have no clue whether to believe the President of the United States or the leadership of one of our biggest enemies.

Do you?

Trump “Truth-ed” seven times in an hour claims about where we are in talks with Iran, about ending the war and their efforts to develop a nuclear bomb.

Iran said all seven claims were false.

Iran “completely opened” the Strait of Hormuz” and then said no it didn’t.
Has President Trump finally worn out any sense that he can be honest at least about the state of war – about our women and men being in harm’s way? Does he consult with advisors at all before he punches the buttons on his phone?

Or is he - and I’m just being serious here - truly out of his mind, senile, or riddled with false understandings of his power?

Does he really believe that meme he published of himself as Jesus Christ was a selfie? Or that he was a doctor tending to the sick?

That one, that lie about that meme, led me to think he just thinks “we” are that stupid. A couple of days later, with his claims of Iran accepting all of our conditions to end the war, I wonder if - and I’m being serious here again - if he truly has lost his mind.

Next thing he’ll claims that ending the war with Iran is the 11th time he ended another war and he still can’t get a Nobel.

Yes, he may say he settled the war he started.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

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Hocus, pocus! They'll lose their focus!

4/2/2026

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President Donald J. Trump’s bravado act is beyond stale.

His first of his second term prime-time speech last night was not just a snoozer, it was full of lies, half truths and, well, bravado as his polling numbers continue to sink, whether he accepts that fact or not.

Most everyone expected a speech that would give a timeline for the war in Iran to end. The best we got was his standard “two weeks or so” prediction. He’s in charge, he can end it today if he wanted to.

Instead, we are watching even more troops being sent to the region as we hear rumors of special operations that could go (on the ground) after Iran’s uranium stash or Kharg Island.

Trump laid out the time lines we’ve experienced for world wars and other “conflicts” – Vietnam, Iraq -- over the years trying to put his month-old war into a context, that he didn’t enter another quagmire.

But none of those commanders-in-chief thought that’s what they were doing either.

What will happen? Tune in next week, or the week after!

Trump is running the country like it’s his old weekly game show on TV: Build the drama, watch the audience reaction, shift gears without saying you’re shifting gears.

Hocus pocus., they’ll lose their focus!

Likely, though, not this time.

At least for that “base” that voted for someone else plus that slice of swing voters who went his way in 2024 but are peeling off after just a year of his second presidency. Young people, Latinos, people unhappy with the Democratic Party's results.

No predictions here on the mid-terms – it’s too early – but at this moment, it’s not looking good for the President’s team. The good news for them is that the opponent is the Democratic Party and they could blow an election at any time as quickly as you need to blow your nose.

Stay tuned!!!

Trump already was forced to switch up some of his immigration battle in Minnesota and, finally, ditched Kristi Noem at the Department of Homeland Security because he either realized she was the disaster most people anticipated or that she was starring in her own multi-million-dollar ads campaign instead of focusing them completely on Donald J. Trump.

Goodbye Kristi, hello MarkWayne!

Today, rumors are all over that Attorney General Pam Bondi will be the next to go. Why? Not because she isn’t doing things she’s there to do for the American people but because she’s failing Trump’s agenda when it comes to the (shhh) Epstein Files and getting indictments against Trump’s enemies, both of which were the charge given her by the President.

Not to make America great, but to satisfy his selfish goals of punishing his “enemies” and apparently hiding some of his secrets.

Speaking of which, the President will soon be clearly viewing the Supreme Court as even more of an enemy, despite his appointing what gave conservatives what they thought was a super majority. While he’s kinda-sorta won some support at the court (through semi-but-not-really court decisions) even his presence in the court yesterday couldn’t stop the justices from pointedly questioning his executive order to end birthright citizenship which has a century-and-a-half of precedence in the country.

Trump has succeeded in creating so much activity and chaos in the country and world that people aren’t even remembering that today is the anniversary of his “Liberation Day,” when he began issuing tariffs against friends and foes to better Americans' life, supposedly to improve our  quality and cost of living.

A year later, prices, as predicted by most legitimate economists on both the right and left, are up, and that was before his war of choice in Iran which has sent gas prices soaring. That has created problems not just for people who need to commute to work but just as the warmer, travel months are arriving. (Not that taking out Iran's leadership and nukes isn't a fine goal but, as with  Trump on most things, his execution was horrible.)

His promises of a return to manufacturing? Manufacturing jobs are down. And that is during his term, not because of Joe Biden, whatever his faults might have been. His inflated claims of, now, $18 trillion dollars in announced potential investment in the USA? Even his own people say the announced promises amount to half of that and even if the $18 trillion was true, you wouldn’t see a job created by that investment for years.

Bravado. Lies. Fantasy. Gaslighting.

That’s what we’re getting from the Trump presidency. Not to mention higher prices, war, and Cabinet members chosen for their appearance (men and women) rather than for their competence.

Chief Justice John Roberts put things in some perspective yesterday when he said, “it’s a new world, but the same Constitution.”

That seemingly off-the-cuff comment came during the birthright citizenship case yesterday and one hopes is also the view of the entire court as we look to survive another three years of bravado and lies.

A President is elected to protect that Constitution not to walk on it.
 

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    B. Jay Cooper

    B. Jay is a former deputy White House press secretary to Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. He also headed the communications offices at the Republican National Committee, U.S. Department of Commerce, and Yale University. He is a former reporter and is the retired deputy managing director of APCO Worldwide's Washington, D.C., office.
    He is the father of three daughters and grandfather of five boys and one girl. He lives in Marion, Mass.

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