Conspiracy theories are red meat for President Donald Trump. Yet, he’s facing one he didn’t instigate and can’t control.
Candidate Trump embraced the baseless claim that Barack Obama was not born in the United States, wasn’t an American citizen and was therefore an illegitimate president. Now, without any actual evidence at all, some Maga figures are asking if the 2024 attempt to assassinate Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, was staged. Outlandish and devoid of facts as this may be, it’s a sign of distrust in Donald Trump from those who were once his most fervent supporters.
The way in which the Epstein Files were released and President Trump’s war against Iran have fractured his hitherto rock solid Maga coalition. Followers raised on Donald Trump’s conspiracy theories now have one of their own to share.
The image of the injured former President defiantly lifting his fist in the moments after the attempt to kill him on 13 July 2024, while shouting “Fight! Fight! Fight!’ instantly became iconic. Volunteer firefighter Corey Comperatore was killed during the attempted assassination attempt, while trying to shield his family, and the suspected shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks was killed by a Secret Service Agent shortly afterwards. Yet there was confusion in the immediate aftermath about what had caused the then former president’s injuries.
Then FBI Director Chris Wray made ambiguous comments which were interpreted as casting doubt on whether Donald Trump had actually been hit by a bullet. The FBI had to release a statement confirming that “what struck former President Trump in the ear was a bullet, whether whole or fragmented into smaller pieces”.
Donald Trump’s courage while literally under fire became a defining part of his mythology, as he successfully campaigned to regain the Presidency, and afterwards. A portrait of him with a raised fist, wounded ear and bloodied face now hangs in the White House. To his most loyal supporters, inside and outside 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, he is the chosen one. The FBI concluded that Thomas Matthew Crooks acted alone when he shot Donald Trump. But questions about what happened in Butler and the FBI’s investigation into the suspected shooter have been spreading online and within the Maga movement.
Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News host and Trump cheerleader who’s an influential conservative podcaster and key Maga figure, began asking in November if the FBI was somehow involved in covering up the shooting, by concealing the suspect Matthew Crooks’ online footprint – a claim the FBI denied. As the American magazine Wired has reported, when former US National Counterterrorism Director Joe Kent appeared on Carlson’s podcast in March, a day after he resigned his position over the Iran war, he and Carlson discussed the failure of the Trump administration to provide more details about the alleged Butler gunman.
Kent claimed that investigations into the shooting had been shut down before they finished. Former Minnesota Governor and WWE star Jesse Ventura told Piers Morgan last month that what happened in Butler was a “blade job” – a wrestling term referring to when fighters intentionally cut themselves to make it appear as though they’ve been hurt by their opponents.
Into this febrile atmosphere came Sunday’s intervention from former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who shared a detailed post on X from a Maga follower suggesting the attempt on Trump’s life may have been a “plot” which “couldn’t have been scripted better” if it were “to have been done in a studio”. Majorie Taylor Green, who was one of President Trump’s greatest advocates until the two fell out, called the post “extremely important”.
She added: “I’m not calling the Butler assassination a hoax. But there are a lot of questions that deserve public answers. I’m asking why won’t Trump release the information about Matthew Crooks? Did he actually act alone? If not, who is behind him and who helped him? Why the cover up?”
Marjorie Taylor Greene and others say the family of Corey Comperatore, the volunteer firefighter killed in Butler, deserve to know why he died.
Both Tucker Carlson and Marjorie Taylor Greene are currently disenchanted with President Trump – the war with Iran is for both a betrayal of the President’s pledge to end forever wars in the Middle East and put America First. Marjorie Taylor Green may have resigned from Congress but she’s a pivotal Maga voice, who’s now suggesting there’s a division between Maga true believers like herself and those within Maga who are part of what she calls the cult of personality surrounding Donald Trump.
In a world where clicks and likes and reposts are the currency of the realm, raising questions about what happened in Butler is a surefire way to gain traction online. The White House is left to rebut the conspiracies, saying only a “fool” would believe them.
Does any of this matter? The Trump administration is worried about failing to turn out the Republican base in November’s mid-term elections, where control of Congress is at stake. Once devoted supporters of Donald Trump who are now questioning his commitments to bring down prices and keep America out of the Middle East may be more likely to stay at home if they also hear there are unanswered questions about the attempt to assassinate him – regardless of the lack of evidence.
Hence then, the article about the maga conspiracy trump can t escape was published today ( ) and is available on inews ( Middle East ) The editorial team at PressBee has edited and verified it, and it may have been modified, fully republished, or quoted. You can read and follow the updates of this news or article from its original source.
Read More Details
Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( The Maga conspiracy Trump can’t escape )
Also on site :
- Blazers’ Splitter on Dundon reports: ‘Trying to be a pro’
- Tehran held military parades as ceasefire was set to end
- Iconic ’80s Rocker's Gesture Toward His Daughter Draws Attention
