Trump Refuses to Wear Bulletproof Vest After Three Attempts on His Life — Including Shooting at Correspondents’ Dinner
A Secret Service agent was shot at close range. The President was rushed from the room. And when it was all over, Donald Trump stood at a press conference and told the world he still won’t wear a bulletproof vest.
That moment — coming just days ago, after what authorities described as the third assassination attempt on Trump’s life — has left millions of people stunned and sharply divided.
The Most Recent Incident
The latest incident took place on April 25, 2026, at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. A man opened fire at the event. Trump was immediately rushed out of the room by Secret Service.
A Secret Service agent was struck by a bullet during the incident. He survived. The reason, Trump later confirmed, was the vest he was wearing.
The suspect has since been charged with one count of attempting to assassinate the President of the United States, transportation of a firearm and ammunition in interstate commerce with intent to commit a felony, and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence.
It was a charge list that underscored just how serious the moment was — and how close things had come to a very different outcome.
What Trump Said
Speaking at a press conference shortly after the incident on Saturday night, Trump addressed reporters directly. He spoke about the injured agent with visible warmth.
“One officer was shot but saved by the fact that he was wearing, obviously, a very good, bulletproof vest,” Trump said. “He was shot from a very close distance with a very powerful gun.”
He confirmed the agent was on the road to recovery.
“The vest did the job,” Trump said. “He’s doing great. He’s in great shape, he’s in very high spirits and we told him we love him and respect him. He’s a very proud guy, proud of what he does, a Secret Service agent.”
And yet despite that testimony — despite watching his own agent survive precisely because of the protection Trump himself refuses to wear — the President confirmed he would not be changing his position on the vest.
The Two Previous Attempts
The Correspondents’ Dinner shooting was not the first time someone had tried to harm Donald Trump. It was the third.
The first attempt came on July 13, 2024, at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. A gunman opened fire from a nearby rooftop. Trump, who was the Republican presidential candidate at the time, was struck in the ear. He was rushed to safety. The shooter was killed.
The images from that day — Trump raising his fist to the crowd with blood on his face — circled the globe within minutes and became one of the most discussed moments of the entire election year.
The second incident occurred on September 15, 2024, at Trump’s Florida golf club. A man was arrested after allegedly positioning himself near the course perimeter with a firearm. The suspect was later identified and charged in connection with what the FBI described as a planned attack.
Three incidents. Three separate individuals. Three moments where the outcome could have been catastrophically different.
Why This Is Causing Such Strong Reactions
For many people, the story raises an immediate and obvious question: why would a man who has survived three assassination attempts refuse the most basic layer of physical protection available to him?
The source article does not detail Trump’s specific stated reasons for declining the vest, but his decision has generated intense public debate across the United States and beyond.
Supporters of Trump have long pointed to his conduct after the Butler shooting — returning to the stage, fist raised — as evidence of a man who does not bend to fear. For many in his base, refusing the vest fits that same narrative. It reads as defiance. As strength. As a refusal to appear diminished or afraid in front of his enemies.
Critics see it differently. They argue that a sitting president has a responsibility that extends beyond personal bravado — that the safety of the most powerful office in the country is not a matter of personal style or image management. They point to the injured Secret Service agent as a reminder that the people around Trump bear the physical consequences of every security decision made on his behalf.
The vest question, for many observers, sits at the intersection of politics, psychology, and the peculiar American relationship with displays of toughness. It is difficult to separate the policy from the persona.
The Agent Who Took the Shot
Perhaps the most striking detail in the entire story is the simplest one.
A man charged with attempting to kill the President of the United States fired a bullet at close range from what Trump himself called a very powerful gun. A Secret Service agent stepped into that risk — as agents do every single day — and survived because he was wearing the same type of protection Trump declines.
Trump’s own words confirmed it plainly. The vest did the job.
That contrast — an agent alive because of a vest, a president refusing to wear one — is what has lodged itself in the public consciousness and refused to let go.
What Happens Next
No formal security policy changes have been publicly announced in the wake of the Correspondents’ Dinner shooting. The suspect has been charged and the investigation is ongoing.
Trump has not indicated he intends to reconsider his position on protective gear at public events.
For the millions of ordinary people watching this story unfold from their homes — in the US, the UK, Canada, and Australia — the feelings it stirs are hard to categorize neatly.
There is something almost impossible to fully process about a man surviving a bullet to the ear, two more documented attempts on his life, and a shooting at a formal dinner — and still refusing the one piece of equipment that, on that very night, kept another man alive.
Whether that reads as courage, recklessness, or something else entirely depends entirely on who you ask.
But one thing is beyond dispute: the conversation about what it means to protect — and to be protected — is not going away anytime soon.





