The Secret Service is facing new scrutiny after a gunman came within range of former president Trump for the second time in less than 10 weeks on Sunday, raising concerns about whether the elite protective agency is stretched too thin in a politically polarized nation where many people have ready access to guns.
“Thank God the presidentâ€
Biden declined to provide additional details about the agencyâ€
Secret Service agentsâ€
But the latest potential attempt on Trumpâ€
Multiple federal investigations are underway into the July 13 attack, including a 60-day “mission assuranceâ€� review by the Secret Service, an independent investigation ordered by Biden and the Department of Homeland Security that is expected to conclude in early October, as well as probes by Congress and the DHS Inspector General, the agencyâ€
The Secret Service plans to launch another mission assurance review of Sundayâ€
The Washington Post reported last week that the internal review had confirmed security failures that led to the July assassination attempt, including that the service never directed local police to secure the roof of the building used by the gunman. Agency officials said they increased equipment and personnel for Trump and other protectees — more than 40 officials and their family members — in response to the attack.
In contrast, the Secret Service won praise for its handling of Sundayâ€
A sharp-eyed agent scouting ahead as Trump golfed at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach spotted a gun barrel poking through a tree-shaded chain-link fence and opened fire, giving the team accompanying the former president time to rush him to safety.
Rep. Bill Keating, a Democrat from Massachusetts who investigated the governmentâ€
He said officials should consider surging resources to protectees such as Trump based on the threat levels they are facing, and not on whether they are a sitting president or only a candidate for office. He said lawmakers also should consider jettisoning some of the agencyâ€
“The index for increased violence is clearly going up,� Keating said.
He said Congress should urgently examine the agencyâ€
“With two instances so close together, we may not be as fortunate in the future,� he said.
The second attack on Trump occurred just as the Secret Service is preparing for one of its most challenging events, the United Nations General Assembly, which draws scores of world leaders to New York, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
And the presidential campaign is in full swing, with under two months to go before the November elections. Trump is expected to meet Monday with the acting director of the Secret Service. On Monday night, Trump is scheduled to unveil a new cryptocurrency business. Vice President Kamala Harris is scheduled to meet with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, a union that has not endorsed a presidential candidate.
Multiple Democratic members of Congress have called for increasing Secret Service funding in the weeks since the July 13 attempt on Trumpâ€
“We have a heightened threat environment … We have a current president, we have a former president running, we have a vice president whoâ€
But House Republicans have consistently stymied additional funding for the Secret Service over the past year as a right-wing bloc of the GOP conference has rebelled against funding bills theyâ€
“President Trump needs the most coverage of anyone,� House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said Monday on Fox & Friends. “We are demanding in the House that he have every asset available, and we will make more available, if necessary.�
“I donâ€
Instead, the House GOP has focused its criticisms on DHS, slamming the agency for delaying the release of an inspector general report related to its failures ahead of and during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. If the report had been released earlier, Republicans have argued, it could have provided insight into Secret Service deficiencies before the assassination attempt against Trump in Butler, Pa.
Rep. Michael Lawler (R-N.Y.) is one of the few House Republicans who has publicly suggested that Secret Service might require more funding. Although he did not specify how much money might be required, he co-authored a bill with Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.) that calls for the Secret Service to increase the number of agents protecting presidential candidates and allows for the appropriation of money “necessary to carry out� the change.
House Republicans face a key decision on Secret Service funding this month. In recent weeks, the White House Office of Management and Budget urged lawmakers to ensure the protective agency has enough money to secure National Special Security Events such as the presidential inauguration and protect Trump and Harris for the remainder of the election. Congress must approve a government funding bill by Oct. 1 to avert a government shutdown.
Carol D. Leonnig and Lori Rozsa contributed to this report.