Trump Says He’s in Danger. So Why Did He Seek Out the Embrace of 100,000 Fans?

By The New York Times (U.S.) | Created at 2024-09-29 23:22:02 | Updated at 2024-09-30 01:29:37 2 hours ago
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Campaign notebook

After two assassination attempts, the former president seems to be relishing the dangers of his job. Some at the Georgia-Alabama football game wondered if his appearance was wise.

Donald Trump waves to fans at a football game from a skybox.
Donald Trump with fans during the Alabama vs. Georgia football game in Tuscaloosa on Saturday.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

Shawn McCreesh

Sept. 29, 2024, 7:14 p.m. ET

Chicken tenders and cynicism were flying through the air.

It was Saturday night in Tuscaloosa, Ala., and former President Donald J. Trump was in the bowels of Bryant-Denny Stadium at the University of Alabama, surrounded by screaming football fans. He began hurling boxes of chicken at them. His aides filmed his every movement, uploading the footage to social media.

One popular pro-Trump influencer reposted a video of Mr. Trump traipsing through the concourse, writing: “There have been two assassination attempts on this man in the past three months and he walks into a stadium full of 100,000 people like a boss. Next week he’s returning to the site where he was shot. Total badass.”

It was a perfect encapsulation of the ways in which Mr. Trump and those around him have plied the plots against his life for political benefit.

The shooting in Butler, Pa., which left two men dead, was a terrifying event that could be rewatched endlessly in the era of social media streaming. And it was shocking how close a second would-be assassin got to the former president weeks later at his golf club in Florida. These near misses have rattled the country and stirred memories of dark chapters in American political history.

Mr. Trump relives these attempts on his life at nearly every campaign stop. Lately he has taken to saying that he has one of the most dangerous professions in the world, more dangerous than racecar driving or bull riding. He has bragged about the mortal danger in which he finds himself (“they only go after consequential presidents”); used it as evidence of divine intervention (“God has now spared my life — it must have been God, thank you — not once, but twice”) and as inspiration for set design (he decorated the stage at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee with images of his bloodied face).

There has been a new assassination threat against him from Iran, as retaliation for ordering the killing of the Iranian general Qassim Suleimani in early 2020, and some recent campaign events have been scaled back, modified or canceled altogether. “I am surrounded by more men, guns, and weapons than I have ever seen before,” he wrote on Truth Social last week.


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