Here's What Kamala Harris Had to Say to the Teamsters. It's Pretty Funny.
Ex-CNN Reporter's Take About the GOP and the Media Gets Shredded With One...
Watch Barstool's Dave Portnoy Save a Pizzeria From Closing
Donald Trump Blasts Joe Biden for Commuting Sentences of Death Row Inmates
This Democratic Lawmaker Just Exploited Suicidal Veterans to Promote a Large-Capacity Maga...
Another Biden Parting Outrage
10 New Ideas to Make America's Economy Great Again in 2025
US Lifts $10M Bounty on De Facto Syrian Leader's Head. Here's What He...
Mulvaney Explains What's Really Going on With Trump's Panama Threat
Greenland's PM Responds to Trump Saying US Ownership of Island Is 'Absolute Necessity'
Illegal immigrant Charged in NYC Subway Murder Was Previously Deported
Retiring Sen. Joe Manchin Blasts the Democratic Party in Exit Interview
Some of the Best Things in Life Are (Humanly) Unplanned
Those We Lost in 2024 - A Governor, Senator, and Congresswoman
No Christmas Giveaways to Big Pharma!
OPINION

God's Hand on Donald J. Trump

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
AP Photo/Evan Vucci

An inch.

One inch, and President Donald J. Trump would be dead.

One slight turn of the head.

One slight turn of the head saved Donald J. Trump's life.

The fact that Donald J. Trump is alive today is a miracle. There is no other way to see it. His assassin had a clear line of sight. He was 135 meters from Trump. He got off multiple rounds.

Advertisement

And Trump was wounded. Barely grazed in the ear, bleeding profusely, Trump rose from the ground, pumped his fist, and shouted, "Fight!"

Whatever the reason -- and who knows the reasons of God? -- God decided that Donald J. Trump would live on Saturday.

And that demands an answer of us: Can we, as Trump has now said, unify? Can we come together as Americans? Because if that assassin's bullet had been one inch the other way, our country would have found itself in an unprecedented crisis. The leading candidate for the candidacy, the ex-president of the United States, a man targeted by his political opposition more than any figure our lifetimes, would have been murdered on national television.

What would have come next?

It is almost impossible to imagine. Given the obvious questions about the failures of the Secret Service to secure the roof from which the assassin fired his deadly shots, given the crisis of confidence in our institutions, given the fact that Joe Biden has run an entire campaign on the basis that Trump is an existential threat to the republic -- could we ever come together again? Or would the assassination of Trump have ushered in an era of extreme violence in our politics? Would it have presaged the breaking apart of our social bonds, the actual dissolution of our national ties?

Advertisement

God didn't just save Donald J. Trump on Saturday. He may have saved the United States as well.

What comes next?

What should come next is a realization that Americans are, in fact, compatriots. That we share a country and a future together. The language of dissolution -- the line that "if (INSERT CANDIDATE) wins the presidency, there will never be another election" -- must stop. It is a lie. It was always a lie. Neither candidate on the ballot is Hitler. Neither candidate wishes to end America's elections or send his opponents to concentration camps. I want Donald Trump to win. I've given money to his campaign. I think Joe Biden is the worst president in modern history. But I do not believe that Joe Biden will end America itself if he wins. America will continue to exist, and my political side will continue to fight for its principles.

Joe Biden had the opportunity to deliver such a message in the hours after the Trump assassination attempt -- and he failed signally. He reminded Americans of "the need for us to lower the temperature in our politics" but didn't say the one phrase that might have given such a statement credibility: "everyone, including me." And indeed, just the next day, he gave an interview to NBC's Lester Holt in which he denied any role in ramping up the hysterical tone of America's political rhetoric. Instead, he suggested, that hysterical tone was all the fault of Donald Trump. In essence, it was Trump's own fault someone tried to shoot him.

Advertisement

This is an absurdity. More than that, it is morally disgraceful.

This week, Trump has the opportunity to do what Biden wouldn't: unify the country. He says he wants to do just that. And he can do so by reminding us of the better angels of our nature and by decrying the catastrophist rhetoric that has infected our politics. He can point out that while he disagrees with Joe Biden -- while he thinks Biden is the worst president in American history -- Joe Biden will not be the end of America.

We will continue to live together, to work together and to be a nation.

God gave us all another chance on Saturday. We ought to take it.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos