Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Culture of hate? Trump's America and the White House press gala shooting

Issued on: 28/04/2026  
FRANCE24



Play (44:47 min) From the show

Even if it's the act of a "lone wolf", as first suggested by US President Donald Trump, Saturday night’s White House Correspondents' Dinner drama certainly did not happen in a vacuum. And just as mass shootings have become commonplace in a United States overrun by firearms, so have attempts on the lives of political figures.

We ask about the latest targeting of the US president and the echo chambers that amplify vilification and hate, that turn adversaries into enemies, as well as a social media landscape where conspiracy theories can make a better fit than facts, both as ideology and as a business model.

In the buildup to that White House Correspondents' Dinner, all the talk was of how traditional media – already on the backfoot – would respond to all the bashing, particularly in the week that saw a mega-merger that could change the course of globally renowned news outlet CNN. But we'll never know, as the speech never happened.

Partisanship has always existed. But as the United States gets set to mark its 250th anniversary, is this time different? Is the level of verbal violence specific to a nation where gerrymandered constituencies encourage radical rhetoric? Or do more and more people globally think they're above the law?

Produced by François Picard, Rebecca Gnignati, Juliette Laffont, Ilayda Habip, Charles Wente.


OUR GUESTS
Madeleine SCHWARTZ 
Editor-in-Chief, The Dial

Jacob MCHANGAMA
Executive Director of The Future of Free Speech Project

Bruce CAIN
Professor of Political Science, Stanford University

Nico Hines
Global Editorial Director, The Daily Beast


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