From Grok.
Data from 2010–2024 shows right-wing extremists in the U.S. are responsible for more political violence than left-wing extremists, accounting for ~57–80% of incidents and 90–95% of fatalities, compared to ~10–20% and <5% for the left (CSIS, ADL, FBI). Right-wing violence includes lethal attacks (e.g., white supremacist shootings), while left-wing acts (e.g., antifa protests) are less deadly, often involving property damage. Both sides contribute, but right-wing violence dominates in frequency and impact.
From Grok.
Overall, states that vote Republican (red states) have consistently higher per capita homicide rates than Democratic-voting (blue) states. This pattern holds across multiple years and analyses:
From 2000 to 2020, red states had murder rates 23–40% higher than blue states, even after adjusting for population.9743c7b97312f42773
In 2020 (peak of a national spike), Trump-voting states had rates 40% higher than Biden-voting ones; excluding large cities, the gap was still 12%.fc5a05506fee
Eight of the top 10 states with highest murder rates in 2020 were red states that voted Republican in recent elections.
From Grok.
Overall, states that vote Republican (red states) have consistently higher per capita homicide rates than Democratic-voting (blue) states. This pattern holds across multiple years and analyses:
From 2000 to 2020, red states had murder rates 23–40% higher than blue states, even after adjusting for population.9743c7b97312f42773
In 2020 (peak of a national spike), Trump-voting states had rates 40% higher than Biden-voting ones; excluding large cities, the gap was still 12%.fc5a05506fee
Eight of the top 10 states with highest murder rates in 2020 were red states that voted Republican in recent elections.