‘I’m not a basket case’: Trump describes mindset after White House correspondents’ dinner shooting

‘I lead a pretty normal life, considering, you know, it’s a dangerous life,’ said the US president

Published Sun, Apr 26, 2026 · 03:51 PM
    • (From left) Acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche, President Donald Trump and Secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin at a news conference at the White House on Apr 25.
    • (From left) Acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche, President Donald Trump and Secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin at a news conference at the White House on Apr 25. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

    [WASHINGTON] It was 10.31 pm on Saturday (Apr 26) when US President Donald Trump walked into the White House briefing room, still dressed in his tuxedo and bow tie, to talk about what may have been yet another attempt on his life.

    “Well, thank you very much,” he said. “That was very unexpected!”

    Moments before he walked out, the president posted surveillance footage of a suspect making a mad dash through the cavernous halls of the Washington Hilton. That’s where Trump was attending the White House correspondents’ dinner when gunfire broke out at the hotel. Very little was clear about whatever had happened there.

    But the president wanted to talk about it.

    “It’s always shocking when something like this happens,” he said, standing with the first lady, the vice-president, the defence secretary, the secretary of state, the acting attorney general, the FBI director and the press secretary – all still in their evening wear from the dinner.

    But really, he argued, the whole thing was just the latest example of why he needs to build his maximum-security, legally challenged ballroom at the White House.

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    “I didn’t want to say this,” he said, “but this is why we have to have all of the attributes of what we’re planning at the White House. It’s actually a larger room, and it’s a much more secure. It’s got – it’s drone proof, it’s bulletproof glass.”

    And then he gave the first question of the night to Jiang Weijia, the CBS News correspondent and the president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, who had been seated next to him at the dinner before pandemonium broke out.

    “Madam chairman,” he said, “I just want to say you did a fantastic job. What a beautiful evening.” (Trump does not usually speak this way to the reporters who cover him.)

    She asked him what was going through his mind when he realised his life may have been in danger again. He told the tale: He was sitting with the first lady on his other side when he heard a noise he thought sounded familiar and non-threatening. “I thought it was a tray going down,” he said. “I’ve heard that many times, and it was a pretty loud noise, and it was from quite far away.”

    US President Trump (centre) with First Lady Melania Trump (left) and CBS News senior White House correspondent Jiang Weijia (right) at the annual White House Correspondents' Association dinner in Washington on Apr 25. PHOTO: REUTERS

    His wife was not so sure, he said.

    “Melania was very cognisant, I think, of what happened,” he explained. “I think she knew immediately what happened. She was saying, ‘That’s a bad noise.’” She looked quite stoic behind him in the briefing room. The only word she spoke during the news conference was “No,” after being asked if she would like to say anything at all. The president said that it was “a rather traumatic experience for her.”

    First Lady Melania Trump looks on as President Donald Trump briefs reporters at the White House on Apr 25. PHOTO: NYTIMES

    He described being “whisked away,” thanked law enforcement profusely and said “there wasn’t a whole lot of time to be thinking, because it was a matter of seconds before we were out the door.”

    On the whole, Trump’s response from the podium late Saturday evening was remarkably Zen from a man who has survived two assassination attempts, and whose wife was just ducking under a table while gun-toting agents bum-rushed the ballroom around them.

    Who knows how or if the president’s mindset, his rhetoric, his political instincts or his security apparatus may change in the coming days or weeks. Very little was revealed at the news conference about the suspect’s motivations.

    Still, Trump kept downplaying any insinuation that this latest scare would alter how he goes about his life.

    “I like not to think about it,” he said. “I lead a pretty normal life, considering, you know, it’s a dangerous life. I think I’m, I think I handle it as well – as well as it can be handled.”

    He added: “To be honest with you, I’m not a basket case.”

    All week long he had been aiming screeds at the news outlets in the room, but now he was praising the reporters before him, complimenting their outfits, using a polite tone of voice and thanking them for their work.

    “You’ve been very responsible in your coverage,” he said. “I will say I’ve been seeing what’s been out. You’ve been very responsible.”

    This was definitely not the message he had planned to deliver to the media on Saturday night. He said he was going to make what he called the “most inappropriate speech ever made,” and sounded a bit disappointed that he had been robbed of that opportunity. So disappointed, in fact, that he vowed the dinner would be rescheduled for some time in the next 30 days.

    But then, he would need a rewrite – or at least that is what he said for now.

    “I don’t know if I can ever be as rough as I was going to be tonight,” he said. “I think I’m going to be probably very nice. I’ll be very boring the next time, but we’re going to have a great event.” NYTIMES

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