Norms Impact
FBI proves it: Republicans spent 2024 pointing to a crime ‘wave’ that didn’t exist
National crime fell, yet top Republican leaders sold a fictitious crime “wave,” normalizing electioneering that treats basic federal crime statistics as propaganda to be punished.
Aug 6, 2025
Sources
Summary
FBI statistics show violent crime fell 4.5% in 2024, with murder down an estimated 14.9% and property crime down an estimated 8.1% from 2023 to 2024. The data undercuts a 2024 campaign strategy in which prominent Republican leaders publicly asserted a worsening national crime crisis in defiance of national crime reporting. The practical consequence is a public made easier to manipulate at the ballot box while federal law-enforcement transparency is treated as a political liability.
Reality Check
When national leaders knowingly weaponize false claims of rampant violence, we get policy and policing driven by panic instead of evidence, and our votes become easier to manipulate through manufactured fear. The conduct described is not clearly criminal on this record, but it squarely violates core governance norms by delegitimizing official FBI statistics and conditioning public trust in law enforcement on partisan convenience. Treating accurate federal reporting as “rigged” or politically punishable invites a precedent of political interference in independent law-enforcement communications, weakening democratic accountability and our ability to rely on shared facts.
Detail
<p>The FBI released national crime statistics indicating that violent crime decreased overall in the United States by 4.5% in 2024. The report estimated declines across major categories: murder and nonnegligent manslaughter fell 14.9%, robbery 8.9%, rape 5.2%, and aggravated assault 3.0%. Property crime decreased an estimated 8.1% from 2023 to 2024, and hate crimes decreased an estimated 1.5%.</p><p>During the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly dismissed evidence of declining crime, calling those who accepted it “stupid” and saying believers had “a serious brain problem,” while asserting crime was “through the roof” and claiming people could not “walk across the street” without being shot, mugged, or raped. Sen. Tim Scott described “a wave of violent crime” unseen “in five decades,” Rep. Elise Stefanik denounced a “violent crime crisis,” and Speaker Mike Johnson said communities faced “dramatic increases” in violence, crime, and drugs. The context raises questions about whether releasing politically inconvenient FBI data could create pressure on Director Kash Patel’s position.</p>