WASHINGTON — Lawmakers are scrambling to ensure that the U.S. Secret Service has enough money and resources to keep the nation’s presidential candidates safe amid repeated threats of violence. It’s unclear, though, how much they can do with only weeks before the election, or if additional dollars would make an immediate difference.
Days after a gunman was arrested on former President Donald Trump's golf course, the House on Friday overwhelmingly passed bipartisan legislation 405-0 to require the agency use the same standards when assigning agents to major presidential candidates as they do presidents and vice presidents. The agency has told Congress that it has already boosted Trump's security, but House lawmakers want it put into law.
The efforts come after an assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump at a rally in July, and after Secret Service agents arrested a man with a rifle hiding on the golf course at Trump's Florida club over the weekend. The suspect in Florida apparently also sought to assassinate the GOP presidential nominee.
''In America, elections are determined at the ballot box, not by an assassin's bullet,'' Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., a chief sponsor of the bill, said in floor debate ahead of the vote. ''That these incidents were allowed to occur is a stain on our country."
With the election rapidly approaching and Congress headed out of town before October, lawmakers are rushing to figure out exactly what might help, hoping to assess the agency's most pressing needs while ensuring that they are doing everything they can in an era where political violence has become more commonplace and every politician is a target.
''We have a responsibility here in Congress to get down to the bottom of this to figure out why these things are happening and what we can do about it,'' House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Tuesday. ''This is not a partisan issue. We have both parties working on it."
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Thursday that ''we've got to get the Secret Service into a position where its protectees are shielded in the most maximum way possible.''
Democrats and Republicans have been in talks with the agency this week to find out whether additional resources are needed. Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, the Democratic chairman of the spending subcommittee that oversees the Secret Service, said Congress wants to make sure that if it is spending new dollars, ''it's going to help the situation between now and the inauguration.''