How a stunning political development two years ago led to chart that saved Trump’s life

MILWAUKEE — As the Republican National Convention unfolds at the Fiserv Forum this week, there’s an uncanny connection between Wisconsin politics and the slight move that thwarted the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump’s life Saturday.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), the embattled incumbent running for re-election, persuaded Milwaukee Bucks executive Alex Lasry to withdraw from the Democratic primary deciding who’d challenge Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) two years ago.

In an absolutely stunning move, Lasry took Baldwin’s advice and stepped out, endorsing far-left Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes.

Alex Lasry, whose dad, Marc Lasry, was a co-owner of the Milwaukee Bucks for nine years, is an executive of the NBA team that plays in the Fiserv Forum where the RNC is being held this week. Getty Images for Democratic Party of Wisconsin

Lasry stepped out of the 2022 Wisconsin Senate Democratic primary in a stunning move, allowing Barnes to take the ticket for the Democrats. Getty Images

Barnes, who once said the 2016 election was “rigged” and called Trump a “Russian spy,” went on to lose the race to Johnson in a surprise re-election for the incumbent senator.

Johnson’s 2022 victory is the only statewide race the GOP has won since Republican Gov. Scott Walker lost re-election in 2018. Trump won the state by less than 1% in 2016 and lost it by the same razor-thin margin in 2020.

Had Lasry or any of the more moderate or prominent Democrats in the Senate primary stayed in the race, Johnson might not have won a tough re-election bid. In that case, he would not have been on the plane with Trump on the way to a rally in Green Bay, Wis., when he shared his immigration chart with the former prez, who liked it so much he took it and adapted it to bring on the road for his rallies.

Incredibly, if Trump hadn’t turned his head slightly to refer to the chart at the exact moment he did Saturday in Butler, Pa., the gunman’s bullet likely would have killed him instead of grazing his ear.

Trump credited the chart Johnson gave him with saving his life, telling The Post in an exclusive interview with Michael Goodwin: “I’m supposed to be dead.”

Trump credits Sen. Johnson’s chart with saving his life. REUTERS

The chart Sen. Ron Johnson shared with Trump on April 2, 2024. Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI)

“I’m happy to have been of service there,” Johnson told Fox News about his chart saving Trump’s life. AFP via Getty Images

Johnson is known for his data-rich charts both on the Hill and in his home state. The chart he shared with Trump that day is one he’s been developing since 2014, Johnson’s office told The Post. Impressed, the former president had the senator send it to Trump adviser Jason Miller.

Johnson’s chart shows monthly totals of migrant encounters by border patrols and ports of entry in the Southwest — with encounters spiking after President Biden announced a deportation pause in January 2021 as soon as he took office.

Trump, who slightly modified the chart, used it at a Michigan rally the very same day, April 2, sources told The Post. And the rest is history.

The senator’s office confirmed Johnson and Trump spoke briefly on the phone a few days ago, after the assassination attempt.

A Wisconsin politico made the connection on Twitter when the news came out about the chart Trump turned his head to look at the moment the shooter fired, noting the visual aid was based on the one Johnson shared with him on the plane.

Johnson is known for his charts both on the Hill and in his home state of Wisconsin. Mike De Sisti / USA TODAY / USA TODAY NETWORK

After dropping out of his Senate bid, Lasry returned to the Milwaukee Bucks, the NBA team that plays in the Fiserv Forum in what’s known as the Deer District. That venue is hosting the RNC this week, where Trump will give his acceptance speech for the Republican Party presidential nomination Thursday night.

The RNC holding the convention in Milwaukee is further proof Trump is determined to take back Wisconsin in 2024 and appearing in the Fiserv Forum after surviving the Saturday shooting brings Wisconsin’s role in his political journey full circle — right down to the chart that saved his life.

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