Leadership for the Greater Good: Reflections on Today’s Challenges From Around the Globe

Leadership Lessons From the Trump Assassination Attempt: As Taylor Swift Says “You Play Stupid Games, You Win Stupid Prizes”

Pop art depicting assassination attempt on former President Trump. CC0 Image from Deviant Art. Artist Credit: Olipaintfr

by Dr. Suze Wilson

ILA Fellow Suze Wilson discusses the history of political violence and dangerous speech through the lens of leadership and the assassination attempt on former President Trump.

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The attempted assassination of Donald Trump should not be excused or condoned. And — not but — it is also entirely unsurprising that a leader who has repeatedly flirted with political violence should himself get caught up in a violent act. After all, its long been argued that those who live by the sword risk dying by the sword. 

Much effort is rightfully going into investigating (Long et al., 2024) precisely how and why Trump was so nearly killed on July 13th. However, taking a step back to situate an event within its wider sociocultural, political, and historical context can also be helpful in gaining a broader perspective as to its underlying causes, significance, and meaning.

It is for this reason that history is one of our greatest teachers when it comes to leadership (Wilson, 2023). Paying heed to context, as historians encourage us to do, gets us engaged with leadership’s inherent complexities, (Grint, 2000) the many contingencies shaping what is necessary, possible, or considered desirable in a given place and time. It is also how we can gain a nuanced set of insights as to the long run effects of a leader’s personal strengths and weaknesses and the strategies they pursue, such as are found in Roy Jenkins’ (2002) brilliant biography of Winston Churchill.

Thinking broadly about issues of context helps, too, in interrogating what are often hyperbolic claims that our times are “unprecedented.” Instead, we can compare our experiences to those of the people who came before us, learning from their response to challenges that resonate with those of our own even if they don’t precisely replicate them. American Civil War historian Professor Emeritus Gary Gallagher (2020), for example, countered claims that “the United States in 2020 was more divided than ever before,” by reminding people just how deadly that war was with over 620,000 deaths.

Sociocultural, political, and historical factors are not wholly determinative of an individual’s actions, because we each have agency. But they nonetheless create what philosopher and social theorist Michel Foucault called “conditions of possibility,” (Wilson, 2021) rendering some ways of being and thinking as well as various courses of action far more feasible or credible than others. Widely shared values, beliefs, norms, and the knowledge and technological affordances of our time and place, then, discipline in meaningful ways who we are, what we believe, and what we do. As these change, so may we.

Drawing on these various insights in trying to make sense of the attempt to murder Trump, it is clear that even though the gunman’s motives remain unknown (Stein & Barrett, 2024) the “conditions of possibility” for such an action are currently well entrenched within the United States.

For example, the U.S. has high rates of gun ownership (Schaeffer, 2024) and gun-related deaths, especially when compared to other wealthy countries (Aizenman, 2023). The pro-gun lobby has considerable political influence (Lacombe, 2021). There is, too, a long and troubling history of attempted or “successful” assassinations of U.S. presidents. Lincoln (1865), Garfield (1881), McKinlay (1901), and Kennedy (1963) were all killed while in office, while Ford (1975), Reagan (1981), and GW Bush (2005) all survived attempts on their life. Both Roosevelt presidents were also targets of failed assassination attempts: Teddy was shot when, as a former president, he was campaigning for re-election (1912), and Franklin, when he was President-elect (1933). These factors provide a backdrop which helps render an attempted assassination both thinkable and doable.

A wise, ethical leader, however, would seek to address this “wicked problem” (Grint, 2010) because, while the attempt to kill Trump attracts attention, it is but part of a wider travesty which saw nearly 43,000 Americans die from gun violence in the last year alone (Washburn, 2024). Changes to laws and norms can help bring about significant reduction in this level of harm — perhaps drawing lessons from how smoking came to be far more tightly regulated and far less socially acceptable than it was 30 years ago.  

Far from inspiring his followers in ways that uplift them to become moral agents and leaders in their own right... Trump has instead degraded their capacity for facing up to objectively provable facts, thinking critically, and engaging in moral reasoning.

That Trump has himself become a victim of political violence is unsurprising, given he has been a key enabler and legitimator of it for many years. In 2017, for example, his response to the killing of a counter-protestor at a White supremacist rally in Charlottesville was to argue that there were “very fine people on both sides” (Klein, 2018). In 2023, he characterized those opposing him as “thugs that live like vermin” (Kurtzlben, 2023).  Building on his long-standing habit of characterizing undocumented migrants as criminals, despite evidence (Ye Hee Lee, 2015) they are no more likely to commit violent crimes than people born in the U.S., he recently claimed they are “not people….these are animals”  (Layne et al., 2024).

Not only are these statements racist and hateful, they constitute examples of “dangerous speech” — rhetoric that dehumanizes and portrays a particular group as posing a mortal threat to others and thereby helps to warrant violence against them. For years now, Trump has been banging this dangerous drum about illegal migrants from Latin and South America and Muslims from anywhere as well as deploying the tropes of antisemitism (Blake, 2022) all of which greatly contribute to a climate that leaves people more vulnerable to racist, Islamophobic, and antisemitic violence. Multiple studies show racist hate crimes and online harassment rose (Giani & Méon, 2021), not only in the U.S. but elsewhere, after Trump’s 2016 election. Incidents involving violence against Americans of South Asian origin in which xenophobic and/or anti-Muslim sentiment was identified as a motivating factor grew by 46% (Modi et al., 2018) in the year following his election.

Dangerous speech by a leader is especially concerning because the shared sense of identity that bonds leaders and followers is a powerful influence on our beliefs and behaviors, insights which underpin the social identity theory of leadership (Haslam et al., 2020). In Trump’s case, that bond is particularly potent, characterized by some as a cult-like dynamic (Hassan, 2020). Indeed, it is strong enough to cause some people to rapidly change their minds on significant issues of principle so as to maintain fealty to Trump: YouGov polling (Orth, 2024) before and after Trump’s conviction in May on 34 felony charges in the Stormy Daniels hush money case found that the proportion of Republican voters saying criminality was undesirable in a president fell from 34% in February to just 19% in June.

YouGov also reported just 17% of Republicans thought it was ok for a felon to be president before Trump’s conviction, but after it that number rose to 58% with a further 19% unsure. Put another way, before the conviction 83% of Republicans did not think it was ok for a felon to be president, but after Trump’s conviction this number dwindled to just 23%.  

Far from inspiring his followers in ways that uplift them to become moral agents and leaders in their own right, the promise of transformational leadership theory, Trump has instead degraded their capacity for facing up to objectively provable facts, thinking critically and engaging in moral reasoning. Accordingly, they turn a blind eye both to his bizarre, unhinged ramblings — such as his incomprehensible discussion of electric powered boats and sharks during a rally in Las Vegas on June 10 — and to his repeated flirtations with political violence — such as him “joking” that if re-elected he would be a dictator “but only on day one” (Colvin & Barrow, 2023).

All this helps in creating a context in which political violence comes to be seen as not only legitimate but necessary, in particular by Trump and his supporters. Perhaps its most potent expression to date is the manner in which Trump’s false claims that he won the 2020 election were foundational in motivating the January 6th, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Trump has shifted the norms, values, and beliefs of his followers such that lawless and even violent actions by him, if re-elected, seem unlikely to dent their devotion to him. Moreover, he has won the backing of the Supreme Court to claim absolute immunity from prosecution for “official acts” (Debusmann, 2024). Such influences likely increase his potential to engage in lawless or even violent actions, especially if re-elected.

Accordingly, while the assassination attempt on July 13th, 2024, brought Trump within a hair’s breadth of the most stupid of prizes — his own martyrdom — his actions show us he is playing a long, stupid game in which other acts of politically motivated violence are being continuously rendered ever more possible.

References

Aizenman, N. (2023, October 31). How the US Gun Violence Death Rate Compares With the Rest of the World. National Public Radio. https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2023/10/31/1209683893/how-the-u-s-gun-violence-death-rate-compares-with-the-rest-of-the-world

Blake, A. (2022, October 17). Trump’s Long History of Trafficking in Antisemitic Tropes. Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/10/17/trump-history-antisemitic-tropes/

Colvin, J., & Barrow, B. (2023, December 8). Trump’s Vow to Only Be a Dictator on ‘Day One’ Follows Growing Worry Over His Authoritarian Rhetoric. Associated Press. https://apnews.com/article/trump-hannity-dictator-authoritarian-presidential-election-f27e7e9d7c13fabbe3ae7dd7f1235c72

Debusmann, B. (2024, July 1). Trump Has Some Immunity From Prosecution, Supreme Court Rules. BBC. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czrrv8yg3nvo  

Gallagher, G. W. (2020, February 15). Think the US Is More Polarized Than Ever? You Don’t Know History. The Conversation https://theconversation.com/think-the-us-is-more-polarized-than-ever-you-dont-know-history-131600

Giani, M., & Méon, P.-G. (2021). Global Racist Contagion Following Donald Trump’s Election. British Journal of Political Science, 51(3), 1332-1339. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123419000449

Grint, K. (2000). The Arts of Leadership. Oxford University Press. https://amzn.to/3Xu6jQw

Grint, K. (2010). The Cuckoo Clock Syndrome: Addicted to Command, Allergic to Leadership. European Management Journal, 28(4), 306-313. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emj.2010.05.002

Haslam, S. A., Reicher, S., & Platow, M. J. (2020). The New Psychology of Leadership: Identity, Influence and Power (2nd ed.). Routledge. https://amzn.to/4dGTurx

Hassan, S. (2020). The Cult of Trump. Simon and Schuster. https://amzn.to/3YZoL4D

Jenkins, R. (2002) Churchill. PanBooks. https://amzn.to/3Z2R1De

Klein, R. (2018, August 13). Trump Said ‘Blame on Both Sides’ in Charlotteville, Now the Anniversary Puts Him on the Spot. ABC News. https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/trump-blame-sides-charlottesville-now-anniversary-puts-spot/story?id=57141612

Kurtzleben, D. (2023, November 17). Why Trump’s Authoritarian Language About ‘Vermin’ Matters. National Public Radio. https://www.npr.org/2023/11/17/1213746885/trump-vermin-hitler-immigration-authoritarian-republican-primary

Lacombe, M. J. (2021). Firepower: How the NRA Turned Gun Owners Into a Political Force (Vol. 180). Princeton University Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv16c9hgx

Layne, N., Slattery, G., & Reid, T. (2024, April 4). Trump calls Migrants ‘Animals’, Intensifying Focus on Illegal Immigration. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-expected-highlight-murder-michigan-woman-immigration-speech-2024-04-02/

Long, C., Balsamo, M., Sisak, M. R., & Jalonick, M. C. (2024, July 18). Multiple Failures, Multiple Investigations: Unraveling the Attempted Assassination of Donald Trump. Associated Press. https://apnews.com/article/trump-shooting-rally-a1bcbaa4a604e09be8cc22893751895b

Modi, R., Sridaran, L., & Raghunathan, S. (2018). Communities on Fire: Confronting Hate Violence and Xenophobic Political Rhetoric. https://saalt.org/report-communities-on-fire-confronting-hate-violence-and-xenophobic-political-rhetoric/

Orth, T. (2024, June 5). After the Trump Verdict, Most Republicans Say They’re OK With Having a Criminal as President. YouGov. https://today.yougov.com/politics/articles/49617-opinion-change-post-trump-hush-money-guilty-verdict

Schaeffer, K. (2024, July 24). Key Facts About Americans and Guns. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/07/24/key-facts-about-americans-and-guns/

Stein, P., & Barrett, D. (2024, August 28). FBI Identifies No Motive or Foreign Links in Trump Assassination Attempt. Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2024/08/28/trump-rally-shooting-motive-unknown-thomas-matthew-crooks/  

Washburn, K. (2024, February 14). Nearly 43,000 People Died From Gun Violence in 2023: How to Tell the Story. Association of Health Care Journalists. https://healthjournalism.org/blog/2024/02/nearly-43000-people-died-from-gun-violence-in-2023-how-to-tell-the-story/

Wilson, S. (2021). Doing Discourse Analysis in COVID-19 Conditions: A Foucauldian Approach. In A. D. Hill, J. K. Lê, A. F. McKenny, P. O’Kane, S. Paroutis, & A. D. Smith (Eds.), Research in Times of Crisis (Vol. 13, pp. 37-52). Emerald Publishing. https://doi/10.1108/S1479-838720210000013005

Wilson, S. (2023). Leadership through history: Rethinking the present and future of leadership via a critical appreciation of its past. In D. Schedlitzki, M. Larssson, B. Carroll, M. C. Bligh, & O. Epitropaki (Eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Leadership (2 ed., pp. 322-334). Sage.

Ye Hee Lee, M. (2015, July 8). Donald Trump’s False Comments Connecting Mexican Immigrants and Crime. The Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2015/07/08/donald-trumps-false-comments-connecting-mexican-immigrants-and-crime/

Blog Image reproduced under CC0 license. “Pop art Donald Trump assassination attempt” by Olipaintfr

Suze Wilson

Dr. Suze Wilson is a leadership scholar and senior lecturer at Massey University, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand. Her research examines issues of power, identity, gender, ethics, discourse, practice, context and crisis in relation to leadership and its development.  Her doctoral thesis won the 2014 Fredic M. Jablin Doctoral Dissertation Award given by the ILA in partnership with the Jepson School of Leadership Studies.  Her work has appeared in the Journal of Business Ethics, Organization, Organizational Dynamics, Leadership and Culture and Organization.  Suze’s books are Thinking differently about leadership (2016), Revitalizing leadership (2018), written in collaboration with Stephen Cummings, Brad Jackson and Sarah Proctor-Thomson, and After leadershipwhich she edited in collaboration with Brigid Carroll and Josh Firth. She is currently involved in editing the forthcoming Routledge Critical Companion to Leadership Studies along with David Knights, Owain Smolovic-Jones and Helena Liu.  She is an Associate Editor of the journal Leadership and also writes public commentary for The Conversation. Prior to entering academia Suze held a range of senior leadership roles in several government agencies, the New Zealand postal service, in a trade union and in the student union movement.  

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