| ◼ Next time, get a better mentalist.
◼ A gunman attempted to breach security at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner and assassinate President Donald Trump. This was at least the third major attempt on the president’s life. Thankfully, the shooter was quickly subdued by Secret Service agents. In his manifesto, sent to family members shortly before his attempted attack, he wrote, “I am no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes.” He posted more than a thousand times on the social media site Bluesky, used almost exclusively by progressives. Well after a great many details about the shooter and his worldview had been reported, former President Barack Obama posted on social media: “Although we don’t yet have the details about the motives behind last night’s shooting at the White House Correspondents Dinner, it’s incumbent upon all us to reject the idea that violence has any place in our democracy.” The latter half of that statement is noble; the first half is a transparent attempt to obscure the fact that the shooter’s hatred of Trump is par for the course among the progressive grassroots. This doesn’t mean that harsh criticism of the president is off-limits. But the Left has a predilection for violence that it is unwilling to acknowledge, let alone confront.
◼ Two days before the Correspondents’ Dinner, in a skit on his ABC late-night show, Jimmy Kimmel remarked of Melania Trump, “You have a glow like an expectant widow.” Given that President Trump had already survived two assassination attempts, the joke was tasteless at the time. It sounded even worse after the dinner. In a rare statement, the understandably shaken first lady condemned Kimmel and urged ABC to “take a stand.” The president himself was more emphatic in calling for Kimmel to be fired immediately. Kimmel’s joke was crass, but it shouldn’t be the business of government officials to police what’s said by late-night comics. The Federal Communications Commission is preparing to revoke Disney’s broadcast license following the joke. That’s preposterous. It is perfectly reasonable to argue that left-wing voices should tamp down rhetoric that plays a role in convincing mentally unstable fanatics that violence is the only solution to what ails the nation. But to point the finger at Kimmel is to follow the same path by which Bill Clinton tried to blame conservative talk radio for the Oklahoma City bombing. While the FCC can theoretically exert significant authority over broadcast media in the name of the “public interest,” that is an argument for abolishing the agency and not for wielding its power more bluntly. Kimmel’s career should end because he is painfully unfunny, not because he has angered the government.
◼ Negotiations between the United States and the Iranian regime have stalled, leaving the world economy in limbo as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to traffic. The threat of air strikes has kept many essential supplies idling in the Persian Gulf. Fuel shortages are developing in Europe and Asia, and fertilizer prices have spiked just as farmers are planting crops. To break the chokehold on the strait, Trump has maintained a naval blockade against Iran, depriving the regime of oil exports that are indispensable to its finances. It appears to be causing serious pain. Iran’s economy is reportedly collapsing, and government revenues are drying up. That is probably why the mullahs have made a new offer to reopen the strait in exchange for Trump’s lifting the blockade and ending the war. Yet the regime still considers limits on its nuclear program and other pillars of Iranian aggression to be off the table. If the blockade is working, it may need to continue until Tehran concedes to terms that America can accept. Until then, however, the world will pay for the energy scarcity that Iran has proven it can inflict.
◼ The Department of Justice dropped its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell. The investigation concerned alleged financial mismanagement of the central bank’s office renovations. Jeanine Pirro, U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, said that while her office has closed its investigation, the Office of the Inspector General will undertake the inquiry. In two previous investigations, the IG had looked into the renovation project and found no wrongdoing. Powell himself had also requested an investigation of the project in 2025, following mounting pressure from Trump and his allies. (The initial estimate for the project was $1.9 billion, but the renovations have far exceeded that, reaching at least $2.5 billion.) Powell’s term is up in May, and Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh as the new Fed chairman. The end of the investigation against Powell was crucial to Warsh’s confirmation, as Republican Senator Thom Tillis had said he would not vote for Warsh until the “bogus” probe was resolved. In part because of the possibility that the legal harassment will continue, Powell has said he will continue as a Fed official after his chairmanship ends, an unusual but legal move. The president’s pettiness is thus limiting his ability to shape monetary policy. Given his inflationary bias, that may not be such a bad thing.
◼ Seashells? Embarrassingly, the Department of Justice indicted former FBI Director James Comey for a juvenile social media post of a photo of shells arranged in the pattern of the numbers 86 and 47. While it is true that “86” can be construed to mean “kill” in criminal slang, it is also used to mean “to dispose of” something, and “86 47” has become a popular progressive shorthand for getting rid of Trump (the 47th president). Posting an image of it to express anti-Trump sentiment is protected speech. Besides, Comey quickly deleted the post, claiming that he didn’t realize its potentially violent connotation. When conservative commentator Jack Posobiec posted “86 46” on social media during the Biden years, he was not (as he should not have been) investigated or indicted. This is an instance of selective enforcement against someone Trump loathes, which alone would be a basis for dismissal. It also comes after Trump’s previous failed attempt to prosecute Comey on separate grounds. Less than a month after Trump sacked Attorney General Pam Bondi, complaining that she wasn’t prosecuting enough of his political opponents, the new acting AG, Todd Blanche is, to his shame, trying to cater to Trump’s lawless desires more. The sooner this case is tossed and this sorry episode forgotten, the better. |