MSNBC did not air Morning Joe on Monday in part to avoid the risk of a guest making inappropriate comments about the attempted assassination of Donald Trump.
It also emerged that the roof from gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks shot at Donald Trump had preciously been flagged as a potential security problem by the Secret Service.
Trump arrived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for the Republican National Convention where he will this week accept his party's nomination.
The former president said 'I'm supposed to be dead' and issued a call for unity.
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MSNBC pulls Morning Joe for Monday out of worries of what guests could say about Trump
MSNBC did not air Morning Joe – its signature morning politics show – on Monday, instead airing breaking news coverage of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump.
The decision was made in part to avoid a potentially embarrassing moment for the network.
There were worries one of the guests on the program’s roundtable might make an inappropriate comment on live television that could be used to attack the network and the program, CNN reported.
The network is known for having guests that tilt toward progressive and Democratic politics.
Some of Trump’s supporters have blamed the ‘liberal media’ for the attempt on the former president's life.
Cesar Conde, the chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, appears to have been behind the decision to yank the show.
The hosts Joe Scarborough and Mike Brzezinski are vehement Trump critics and have often clashed with the former president
Milwaukee prepares for historic Republican National Convention after Trump shooting
AOC slams anonymous Democrat who said party is 'resigned' to Trump winning the election
Trump says dismissal of documents case is the first step in 'uniting our nation'
Former President Donald Trump took to Truth Social on Monday morning to welcome the dismissal of the Florida documents case against him.
He arrived in Milwaukee on Sunday evening for the Republican National Convention a day after surviving an assassination attempt.
The developments in Florida will provide a filip to a campaign that is on the up after weeks of pressure on his opponent President Joe Biden.
Lawmakers will be briefed by Secret Service on Trump shooting Tuesday
A lawmaker briefing with the Secret Service will occur on Tuesday, a source familiar tells DailyMail.com.
In addition, based on the House Oversight Committee's conversations with the Secret Service, Director Cheatle is expected to appear for a hearing on Monday, July 22.
The source added that more details will be announced soon.
Full breakdown of what to watch this week at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in Milwaukee, Wisconsion
More than 50,000 people are descending on Milwaukee this week for the Republican National Convention in the wake of an assassination attempt on the Donald Trump.
A shooter hit the former president's ear during his rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday before being shot dead by Secret Service. One rally attendee is deceased and two others are injured.
But Trump is still going full steam ahead to Milwaukee this week for the Republican National Convention where he will end the week as the GOP presidential nominee for the third time in a row.
DailyMail.com breaks down all the details of this year's convention and what to watch as the events unfold and how it's affected after the historic assassination attempt:
Sarah Huckabee Sanders to address GOP Convention on Tuesday
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders has a speaking slot at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on Tuesday.
Sanders served as Trump's White House Press Secretary for two years before she tearfully stepped down from her post to pursue public office in her home state.
Jill Biden and Melania Trump speak by phone
The two spoke by phone on Sunday afternoon, a White House official told DailyMail.com.
No other details about the call were available.
Breaking: Trump's classified documents case has been DISMISSED
The classified documents case against Donald Trump has been dismissed by a federal judge in a bombshell ruling less than 48 hours after he was shot.
The former president was accused of taking highly sensitive files to Mar-a-Lago when he left the White House.
Judge Aileen Cannon threw the case out based on 'violations' of the Constitution’s Appointments Clause and Appropriations Clause.
This is a huge win for Trump as he seeks to get his other criminal cases thrown out.
'Getting shot in the face changes a man'
Donald Trump plans to strike a unifying tone at the Republican Convention this week.
He will dial down his rhetoric in a bid to unify America, Axios reported.
Tucker Carlson, who will be speaking at the Convention, told the outlet:
Trump reveals why he called out for his shoes while agents carried him after shooting
Former President Donald Trump has spoken to one of the odd unanswered questions of Saturday’s assassination attempt: his repeated call for his shoes.
‘Let me get my shoes, let me get my shoes,’ Trump said, as agents secured him and told him his head was bloodied. ‘Let me get my shoes,’ Trump repeated.
He told columnist Michael Goodwin of the New York Post, ‘The agents hit me so hard that my shoes fell off, and my shoes are tight,’ smiling at the observation.
Milwaukee businesses protest Republican Convention with signs outside storefronts
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Local Milwaukee businesses protested the Republican National Convention by putting up signs bashing the party.
'Welcome fiuture fake electors,' a sign in the window of the Penzeys Spices store reads.
Another on a chalboard outside a local bar says, 'Horrible city welcomes RNC facists,' in reference to reports Donald Trump called Milwaukee a 'horrible city' during a closed door meeting with Republican lawmakers last month.
Horrifying video shows Trump fans pointing at shooter moments before assassination attempt
By Katelyn Caralle, Senior U.S. Political Reporter
New video emerged Sunday night showing Donald Trump's supporters outside the security perimeter pointing at the would-be assassin as he bear-crawled on the roof of a nearby building before opening fire on the former president.
A nearly 50-second clip shows people outside the Butler, Pennsylvnia event looking, pointing and questioning why there was a man on the roof of an industrial building just 130 yards from the stage where Trump was speaking.
'Look, they're all pointing,' the man behind the camera is heard saying as it pans from the stage to the warehouse roof where a figure is seen crawling. 'Yeah someone's on top of the roof – look.'
'He's on the roof!' a woman yells 40 seconds into the video as Trump is heard in the background continuing his remarks.
Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, was killed by U.S. Secret Service after his assassination attempt on Trump at his rally Saturday.
Trump shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks bought 50 rounds of ammunition hours before shooting, report claims
Donald Trump's would-be assassin purchased 50 rounds of ammunition just hours before the shooting, according to bombshell reports.
The Secret Service also did not sweep the roof where gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire at the former president.
The horrifying new developments reported by CNN come as the Secret Service faces mounting questions over how the 20-year-old managed to get just 130 yards from where Trump was speaking in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Crooks shot Trump in the ear with an AR-style rifle his father purchased legally.
Multiple witnesses have said they warned law enforcement that a gunman was crawling on the building, but didn't respond before he started shooting.
'Look, they're all pointing,' the man behind the camera is heard saying as it pans from the stage to the warehouse roof where a figure is seen crawling. 'Yeah someone's on top of the roof – look.'
The roof where Crooks lay down with his weapon was flagged as a security concern, and was swept by local law enforcement not the Secret Service.
Extra security is visible on plane steps when Trump arrived in Milwaukee
When Donald Trump arrived in Milwaukee last night there was one very visible sign of how the Secret Service had changed its posture around the former president.
Trump usually walks down the steps from Trump Force One alone, all the better to appear commanding in photographs and videos.
But yesterday a Secret Service agent was two steps behind, in a sign of how everything has changed in the wake of Saturday's shooting.
Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle says agency has implemented 'changes' to Trump security detail has she faces calls to resign
Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle has confirmed Donald Trump's security detail has been increased for the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee this week after the assassination attempt.
Embattled Cheatle is facing calls to resign after gunman Thomas Mathew Crooks managed to crawl on a roof just 130 yards away from where Trump was speaking and open fire.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas admits Trump shooting was a failure
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has admitted the shooting of Donald Trump was a ‘failure’ by the Secret Service.
The Biden cabinet member also said gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks should have never been able to get into the ‘direct line’ of sight to be able to open fire.
He spoke out on multiple morning shows and pointed to the independent review ordered by President Joe Biden.
On CNN, he rejected the 'baseless' and 'irresponsible' allegations that requests to increase Trump's protective detail had been denied.
He was also grilled about a report suggesting the Secret Service didn't even sweep the roof where Crooks started shooting and left it up to local law enforcement.
Mayorkas deferred to the independent review and said the federal government always works with police in the area.
Trump says doctor called his survival a 'miracle'
Trump told the New York Post:
American flag still hanging over rally site after Trump was shot
Cops surround Trump shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks' home
Roof gunman shot from had been 'flagged as security concern' by Secret Service
The roof from which gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, shot at Donald Trump had reportedly been flagged as a potential security problem by the Secret Service before the assassination attempt, according to a report by NBC News.
Crooks climbed on to the roof of a building belonging to a glass research company which was 150 yards from where Trump was speaking on a stage in Butler, Pennsylvania. A source told NBC News:
The Secret Service had indicated the building should be under the jursdiction of local law enforcement because it was outside the rally perimiter, according to the report.
Crooks is pictured here in 2021.