Women Shouldn't Be In Secret Service, Says US Right Wing Post Trump Shooting

Women are too short, too weak -- and in some cases, too overweight -- to protect someone like Donald Trump, according to people on the US political right.

Women Shouldn't Be In Secret Service, Says US Right Wing Post Trump Shooting

Several women can be seen among the black-suited agents racing to shield Trump as the gunman opened fire.

Washington:

As questions swirl over how a would-be assassin managed to get anywhere near Donald Trump, some conservatives are blaming the Secret Service for hiring the women agents who threw themselves into the line of fire to protect the former president.

Women are too short, too weak -- and in some cases, too overweight -- to protect someone like Trump, according to people on the US political right who accused the Secret Service of "woke" hiring practices they say nearly got the former president killed.

Several women can be seen among the black-suited, sunglass-clad agents racing to shield Trump with their bodies as the gunman opened fire at a rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday, before hustling him from the stage and into a waiting car and safety.

But they, along with their boss Kimberly Cheatle -- only the second-ever woman director of the federal agency tasked with protecting presidents current, former and would-be -- are now caught in the intense scrutiny over the nearly catastrophic attack.

"There should not be any women in the Secret Service. These are supposed to be the very best, and none of the very best at this job are women," right-wing activist Matt Walsh wrote on X, in one typical post.

"I can't imagine that a DEI hire from @pepsi would be a bad choice as the head of the Secret Service. #sarcasm," tweeted Republican congressman Tim Burchett.

Burchett was referring to Cheatle's previous job as director of global security for Pepsi -- a post she held for several years before returning to the Secret Service, where she had previously spent nearly three decades.

With the phrase DEI -- diversity, equity and inclusion -- he was invoking one of the most popular conservative fronts in the culture wars: the so-called "wokeification" of the workplace as employers strive to diversify their hiring practices beyond white men.

The first women were sworn in as Secret Service agents in 1971. CBS News reported last year that the agency aims to have 30 per cent women recruits by 2030.

"I'm very conscious ... of making sure that we need to attract diverse candidates and ensure that we are developing and giving opportunities to everybody in our workforce, and particularly women," Cheatle told CBS at the time.

The wildly popular conservative Libs of TikTok account cited that interview in a post also blaming hiring practices for the Trump shooting that has received more than 10 million views on X.

"The results of DEI. DEI got someone killed," it read.

'Secret Service A-team' 

Diverse hiring practices accelerated in 2020 after the George Floyd killing forced America into a new reckoning over racism and inclusivity.

But they have seen a growing backlash from conservatives in recent months who complain they unfairly disadvantage white workers in general, and white men in particular.

None other than Ohio Senator J.D. Vance -- Trump's newly-announced running mate -- has spearheaded a recent bill to do away with such efforts.

"DEI is racism, plain and simple. It's time to outlaw it nationwide, starting with the federal government," he tweeted last month as the bill was introduced.

Such practices at the Secret Service faced scrutiny as recently as May, when Congress launched an investigation after a female agent in Vice President Kamala Harris's detail reportedly got into an altercation with colleagues.

The incident raised concerns about this agent's hiring, Kentucky Republican James Comer said in a letter to Cheatle -- specifically, whether staff shortages "had led the agency to lower once stricter standards as a part of a diversity, equity and inclusion effort."

The Secret Service did not immediately respond to questions from AFP.

But in response to the Comer letter, spokesman Anthony Guglielmi told US media that Secret Service employees "are held to the highest professional standards... at no time has the agency lowered these standards."

Cheatle has shrugged off calls for her resignation since the shooting, and the agency has agreed to cooperate with an independent review ordered by President Joe Biden.

Comer has also announced that Cheatle will appear before a congressional panel on July 22 for a hearing on the assassination attempt.

Biden -- in whose detail Cheatle served when he was vice president -- told NBC News on Monday that he feels "safe with the Secret Service," though he agreed it was an "open question" whether they should have anticipated the shooting.

When Trump made his first public appearance after the shooting, at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on Monday, he appeared to be surrounded by an all-male Secret Service detail.

"Now THIS is how you protect a President," posted conservative commentator Rogan O'Handley on X.

"Trump gets the Secret Service A-team now."

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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