Attack on
Shapiro Raises New Fears About Threats to U.S. Politicians
While
political violence has not surged overall, a series of high-profile attempts on
American leaders have shaken a public already worried about the country’s toxic
political environment.
Nick
Corasaniti
By Nick
Corasaniti
April 14,
2025, 3:36 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/14/us/politics/josh-shapiro-pa-governor-fire-threats.html
A charred
piano. A singed light fixture dangling by a cord in a fire-scarred room. Plates
strewn with ash, not far from a dinner table just cleared from a Passover
Seder.
The scorched
rooms inside the official residence of Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania were
the work of an arsonist who the authorities say admitted “harboring hatred” for
Mr. Shapiro. Officials say the suspect revealed that if he found the governor,
he planned to beat him with a hammer.
The attack
on Mr. Shapiro and his family was only the latest prominent attempt on the life
of an American elected official. A string of violent outbursts in recent years
has raised alarms about the threats lawmakers are confronting and the country’s
often poisonous political environment.
President
Trump faced two assassination attempts last year, a bullet grazing his ear at a
rally in Pennsylvania. A group of extremists planned to kidnap Gov. Gretchen
Whitmer of Michigan. A man broke into Representative Nancy Pelosi’s home and
assaulted her husband with a hammer. A gunman attacked Republican members of
Congress as they practiced for a baseball game, wounding Representative Steve
Scalise of Louisiana.
Yet while
the attacks on top officials have rattled Americans in both parties, research
shows that political violence overall is not necessarily on the rise.
Large-scale eruptions — with the notable exception of the Trump-inspired riot
at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — have not become more frequent. Support among
Americans for acts of political violence like murder or arson remains
exceedingly low, according to a weekly study conducted by the Polarization
Research Lab at Dartmouth College.
“The
high-profile nature of the attacks definitely makes it so that the public
perceives political violence as a threat to the country that is
disproportionate to the actual nature of the problem,” said Sean J. Westwood, a
professor at Dartmouth College and the director of the Polarization Research
Lab.
But the
relative rarity of political violence has done little to settle an American
public increasingly on edge, and threats continue to flood the inboxes of
elected officials, election workers and journalists.
Before the
2024 election, more than 70 percent of voters said they were “very worried”
about political violence, according to a poll by the Leadership Conference on
Civil and Human Rights.
On Sunday,
Mr. Shapiro stood outside his residence, where broken and blackened windows sat
behind yellow caution tape, and vowed to work harder as governor in the face of
threats.
“This kind
of violence is becoming far too common in our society, and I don’t give a damn
if it’s coming from one particular side or the other, directed at one
particular party or another, or one particular person or another,” Mr. Shapiro
said, his voice rising with anger. “It is not OK, and it has to stop. We have
to be better than this.”
Condemnation
of the attack was swift and bipartisan.
“Thanks be
to God that Governor Shapiro and his family were unharmed in this attack,” Vice
President JD Vance wrote on social media. “Really disgusting violence, and I
hope whoever did it is brought swiftly to justice.”
“Acts of
violence have no place in our politics,” Senator Cory Booker, a Democrat from
neighboring New Jersey, said in a statement. “Those responsible should be held
accountable.”
Mr. Trump,
who twice survived attempts on his life — and who has pointed to the specter of
domestic terrorism as justification for his aggressive immigration agenda — did
not issue a statement on Sunday or on Monday morning. Asked on Monday in the
Oval Office about the attack, he said the assailant was “probably just a wack
job.”
“Certainly a
thing like that cannot be allowed to happen,” Mr. Trump said.
The
authorities have yet to reveal more information on the suspect’s political
leanings, but several Democrats and Jewish groups noted that the attack against
Mr. Shapiro, who is Jewish, came on the first night of Passover. Law
enforcement authorities have not commented on whether the arson is being
investigated as a hate crime.
“Political
violence of any kind is never acceptable, and it is especially unconscionable
to attack a Jewish family during the first night of Passover,” Representative
Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic minority leader, said in a statement. “Everyone
responsible must be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”
Federal and
state officials have taken steps to address threats of political violence. In
2021, Attorney General Merrick B. Garland created an elections threat task
force based in the Justice Department’s public integrity unit. Last year,
numerous election offices were fortified with bulletproof glass and an
increased security presence.
Such steps
have helped to ferret out and prevent attacks before they happen. Jena
Griswold, the Democratic secretary of state in Colorado, received more than
1,800 death threats and violent threats last year. Law enforcement officials
arrested and charged multiple people said to be responsible.
But the
threats still prompted many local election officials and workers to resign or
back away from working in the next election. In Colorado, county clerks had
roughly 40 percent turnover, Ms. Griswold said in an interview, as “we have
seen people step down because they are not willing to continue to work in this
type of atmosphere.”
“It is very
hard to live under that threat environment,” she said, adding how relieved she
was that Mr. Shapiro and his family were safe. “It definitely takes a toll on
just how you live your daily life, and it absolutely has affected elections
here in Colorado and across the nation.”
Nick
Corasaniti is a Times reporter covering national politics, with a focus on
voting and elections.
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