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Google omitting Trump assassination from Autocomplete feature

A key Google feature is not showing results related to the assassination attempt on Donald Trump, as the former president’s son claims big tech companies are trying to influence the election.

Google users were surprised to find that the search engine’s autocomplete feature omitted results related to the assassination attempt on President Donald Trump.

The anomaly quickly caught the attention of social media users, including Texas congressmen and Donald Trump Jr., who began sharing screenshots of instances where Google’s search suggestions returned no results for searches related to the Pennsylvania rally shooting.

Even if you type the full search term “assassination attempt” into the search bar on the Google homepage, no mention of Trump is made.

Former President Trump was at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on July 13 when a sniper’s bullet came within a quarter-inch of hitting him in the head. AP

The Washington Post ran a number of Google searches using the surnames of US presidents who have been assassinated or who have suffered assassination attempts, plus the letter “assassi,” and looked at the names that Autocomplete suggested, including John F. Kennedy, Abraham Lincoln, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and Teddy Roosevelt.

In each case, they were presented with a helpful list of suggested search terms related to the attempt on their life.

But when Trump’s name was used, Autocomplete offered no suggestions at all.

The keyword “Trump assassination attempt” also resulted in no additional terms being surfaced by Google.

The Washington Post replicated this anomaly and discovered that the autocomplete feature didn’t offer up search suggestions related to the assassination attempt on former President Trump, even when the full sentence was typed in. Nesi, Chris

News articles about the July 13 shooting still appear in Google search results.

A Google spokesperson told The Washington Post that “no manual action was taken in response to these predictions” and that the company’s systems have “protections” built into them against autocomplete predictions “related to political violence.”

“We are working on improvements to make our systems more up to date. Of course, autocomplete is just a tool to save people time and users can continue to search for anything. After this egregious act, people have turned to Google to find quality information. We connect people with useful results and will continue to do so,” the spokesperson said.

As word spread about the strange phenomenon, it caught the attention of thousands of users who were able to replicate it for themselves, including Texas Republican Rep. Chip Roy, who wrote “VERIFIABLE” along with a screenshot of the search he tried.

When The Washington Post ran the search again from its homepage without specifying a specific target, it didn’t return any results related to Trump. Nesi, Chris

Trump Jr. X Post Shared He posted screenshots of autocomplete results and called it “intentional election interference” by the search giant.

“Big tech is once again trying to interfere in our election to help Kamala Harris. We all know this is deliberate election interference by Google. This is so vile,” he wrote to his 11.7 million followers.

It should be noted that The Washington Post also ran partial and full searches for “Biden assassination attempt,” which again showed no autocorrect suggestions.

In what is not widely considered an assassination attempt, alleged neo-Nazi Sai Varshit Kandura rammed a rented U-Haul truck into the White House security barrier in May 2023, saying his goal was to “kill the president if that’s what I have to do.”

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