Speaker Johnson to call for embattled Secret Service chief’s resignation, pledges task force to probe Trump shooting

House Speaker Mike Johnson said he would be calling for embattled Secret Service boss Kimberly Cheatle to resign following her agency’s bungled security operation that permitted the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump.

“I think it’s inexcusable,” Johnson (R-La.) told ABC News Wednesday in response to the agency’s handling of Saturday’s Butler, Pa., rally where 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire on a campaign rally crowd.

Johnson called the bungled Secret Service operation in Butler, Pa., “inexcusable” in an interview with ABC. REUTERS

“I’m going to call for her resignation as well,” Johnson said when asked if Cheatle should step down, referencing calls for her ouster from House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) the day before at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

As for the reasons Cheatle has given to explain the botched protection detail, Johnson said, “it doesn’t wash, and I think she’s shown what her priorities are,” referring to accusations leveled against Cheatle that she’s been overly focused on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) efforts, such as her promise to make the Secret Service 30% female by 2030.

Trump narrowly escaped with his life after a sniper perched on a rooftop about 130 yards away opened fire on the campaign rally crowd. AP

Cheatle has repeatedly defied growing calls to step down.

The speaker also pledged to launch a House task force charged with streamlining the numerous concurrent investigations stemming from the shooting, which killed a retired firefighter and wounded Trump and two others.

He said they’d be moving “quickly” to establish “a special task force within the House” in order to conduct “a precision strike” in following the many threads of the investigation.

Cheatle has faced growing calls to resign after former President Trump was nearly assassinated. AP

Johnson said the task force, which could be established as soon as Monday, would include both Republicans and Democrats, wouldn’t be subject to the usual “procedural hurdles” and would have subpoena authority.

US Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas said Monday on “Good Morning America” that Crooks never should have been able to get a clear line of sight to the former president.

“[A] direct line of sight like that to the former president of the United States should not occur,” Mayorkas said.

Mayorkas, who oversees the Secret Service, said an investigation is underway and from those findings, recommendations will be made to the agency.

“We are going to really study the event independently and make recommendations to the Secret Service and to me so that we can assure the safety and security of our protectees, which is one of our most vital missions in the Secret Service,” Mayorkas said.

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