
Culture of violence: On the Washington press dinner shooting
A gunman breached security and fired shots at the annual dinner gala of the White House Correspondents’ Association in Washington DC, which included U.S. President Donald Trump and other senior administration officials, all of whom escaped unharmed. The suspected shooter, said to be Cole Tomas Allen (31) of Torrance, California, was arrested. This is the third incident of violence apparently targeting Mr. Trump, after a previous occasion on which a would-be assassin’s bullet grazed the President’s ear at a campaign rally, and another in which a gunman was apprehended near a golf course frequented by Mr. Trump. The suspect in this case is said to have “clearly stated” that he wanted to target administration officials, according to the White House, and in a note by the suspect shared by law enforcement officials, he said that he could no longer allow a “traitor to coat my hands with his crimes”. The incident comes in the wake of several high-profile attacks on political figures in recent years. These include the September 2025 killing of Charlie Kirk in Utah, the murder of Minnesota Democratic State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband a few months earlier, and the 2022 attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of former Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It also comes after more than a year of Mr. Trump’s second term in office, a period marked by increasing polarisation over key policies, including immigration, and his association with disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
While bitter partisanship has long marked U.S. politics, it is the ubiquitous proliferation of guns that has truly supplied a deadly edge to disagreements in the public discourse. Ironically, the Trump administration has been at the forefront of efforts to protect the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment, the right to bear arms, to the point where it is often in alignment with the position of the National Rifle Association (NRA) in terms of reversing reasonable restrictions on gun ownership. For example, Mr. Trump supported a ban on assault weapons in 2000, yet he reversed his position by the time he launched his 2016 presidential campaign, one that was backed by millions of dollars spent by the NRA. The U.S. has been periodically wracked by mass shootings, including three this year, and more than 500 over the past 60 years, according to databases tracking such incidents. Notwithstanding the deep pockets and lobbying power of the NRA and its ilk on Capitol Hill, it behoves the U.S. to take a step back from the brink of this unrelenting gun violence epidemic and bring common-sense gun reforms to the table, then to be enacted into law by Congress. Until such time as society and popular culture move towards a more moderate position on gun laws, it is reasonable to believe that violence of the kind routinely witnessed across the country will continue unabated.
Published – April 28, 2026 12:10 am IST



