Another day, another security scare involving President Trump – and once again, the spotlight is on the U.S. Secret Service and whether it’s actually up to the job of protecting the president.
The latest shooting incident at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner is raising uncomfortable questions: how many close calls does it take before “lessons learned” actually turn into policy changes?
According to reporting and firsthand accounts from the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, security leading up to the main event looked more like a casual meet-and-greet than a high-risk environment.
One journalist said he was waved through checkpoints without ID, screening, or even a second glance – only encountering real security just steps from the main ballroom.
My thoughts on the security at the WHCD last night.
The first exterior security for me was on the street outside of the hotel. I flashed my ticket and was waved through in one second. My name was not checked against any list, I showed no ID, I was not patted down and did not go…
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) April 26, 2026
Meanwhile, the shooting suspect’s own manifesto didn’t just outline motives for his attack – it openly mocked what he described as glaring security failures at the hotel, claiming he encountered “no damn security” in key areas leading up to the event.
To be fair, agents reportedly acted quickly when the threat became active. But critics say that’s missing the point. The goal isn’t just reacting fast – it’s preventing someone from getting that close in the first place.
Luckily, Trump hasn’t been killed, but multiple assassination attempts and credible threats have exposed cracks in the system. Each incident reads like a warning shot (excuse the pun) – ignored until the next one.
So the question practically writes itself: will this latest incident finally trigger tighter protocols, or are we stuck in a loop where it takes a catastrophe before anyone locks the front door?
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