Counterterrorism researchers debating a CSIS study on far-left and far-right incidents in a conference room setting.
Counterterrorism researchers debating a CSIS study on far-left and far-right incidents in a conference room setting.
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CSIS study finding left-wing incidents outpaced right-wing in early 2025 sparks methodological debate

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A new analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies concludes that far‑left terrorist plots and attacks outnumbered far‑right incidents in the United States from Jan. 1 to July 4, 2025 — a first in more than three decades — prompting counterterrorism researchers to question the small sample and coding choices that underlie the finding.

The release of the CSIS assessment comes amid renewed focus on political violence after the Sept. 10 assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk during a Utah Valley University event. A 22‑year‑old suspect, Tyler James Robinson, has since been arrested and charged with aggravated murder and related offenses; authorities have not publicly linked him to any organization and have not established a definitive ideological motive. The Kirk killing falls outside the period CSIS studied. President Donald Trump, in an Oval Office address hours after the shooting, condemned the attack, blamed “radical left” rhetoric, and ordered flags flown at half‑staff through Sept. 14. (reuters.com)

Federal assessments and a long record of deadly attacks have for years identified far‑right violence as the most lethal domestic terrorism threat, citing massacres in Charleston (2015), Pittsburgh (2018), El Paso (2019) and Buffalo (2022). Those episodes remain central reference points in the debate over current risks. (justice.gov)

CSIS’s brief, authored by Daniel Byman and Riley McCabe, compiles 750 U.S. attacks and plots from 1994 through July 4, 2025, drawing on sources including the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, the Anti‑Defamation League and media reports. For the first half of 2025, the authors counted five far‑left incidents versus one far‑right — the latter being the June assassination of Minnesota House Speaker Emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the shootings that wounded State Sen. John Hoffman and his wife. A federal complaint charges a suspect in those attacks. (csis.org)

Byman urged caution in interpreting the numbers. “Even the five [left‑wing terrorist incidents] we get for the first half of 2025 — let’s say that pace continues and it’s 10 — that’s a small number compared to right‑wing terrorism when it was at its peak in recent years,” he said, adding that a sharper 2025 decline in right‑wing incidents may reflect grievances being channeled through current administration policies, such as stricter immigration enforcement. (cfpublic.org)

Several experts criticized the report’s small sample and subjective judgments. “Five is a really low case number to try to make any kind of inference from,” said Amy Cooter of the Institute for Countering Digital Extremism. Jacob Ware of the Council on Foreign Relations pointed to inconsistencies, noting the study excluded the May killing of two Israeli Embassy staffers outside Washington’s Capital Jewish Museum and a spate of Tesla‑related arsons, while including an arson attack that torched 11 NYPD vehicles in June. (opb.org)

The CSIS brief does not include the Kirk assassination because it occurred after July 4. Byman has since described it as a likely instance of left‑wing terrorism, a coding that Cooter says is premature pending more evidence. As of now, authorities have not presented public evidence tying the charged suspect to a left‑wing group. (cfpublic.org)

Beyond left‑right categories, researchers warn about hybrid motivations and actors who defy tidy labels — what former FBI Director Christopher Wray has called a “salad bar” of ideologies. NPR’s reporting also notes the FBI’s creation of a coding bucket for “nihilistic violent extremism” to capture non‑programmatic offenders. (csis.org)

The broader landscape of political violence in 2025 has included attacks outside the left‑right spectrum. On Jan. 1, a driver inspired by the Islamic State killed 14 people in a vehicle‑ramming on New Orleans’s Bourbon Street, according to federal and local authorities — an Islamist terrorism case not captured by left‑versus‑right tallies. (reuters.com)

The study’s reception has also been shaped by a shifting data environment. In March, the Department of Homeland Security terminated funding for the University of Maryland’s Terrorism and Targeted Violence (T2V) database, which had been the only public national dataset tracking U.S. terrorism and targeted‑violence incidents, according to START, the university consortium that ran it, and contemporaneous news reports. And in mid‑September, news outlets reported that the Justice Department removed from its website an NIJ summary concluding far‑right extremists have committed “far more” ideologically motivated homicides than far‑left or jihadist actors since 1990; DOJ has cited a broader web‑content review. Researchers say such moves complicate efforts to track and compare threats consistently. (start.umd.edu)

Whatever the precise ideological breakdown in early 2025, Byman and his critics agree on two points: left‑wing incidents have risen from historically low levels, and definitive judgments require care given small‑N data and contested coding. As debates continue, law enforcement and scholars warn that selective readings of incomplete data risk distorting the policy response. (csis.org)

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FBI agents arresting suspects in a foiled New Year's Eve bombing plot tied to a far-left group in Southern California.
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Federal authorities say they foiled New Year’s Eve bombing plot tied to far‑left group

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Federal authorities arrested four people in California who are accused of plotting coordinated New Year’s Eve bomb attacks on multiple business locations across Southern California and discussing future attacks on Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and vehicles. Prosecutors allege the suspects are linked to a far‑left, pro‑Palestinian, anti‑government group described in court papers as an offshoot of the Turtle Island Liberation Front.

Investigators are increasingly attributing a wave of high-profile killings and political violence in the United States to a contemporary form of nihilism, where attackers express contempt for humanity and a desire for civilization's collapse. These incidents, including shootings, a bombing, and a planned drone attack, defy traditional political or ideological labels. The trend reflects broader frustrations in American politics amid institutional distrust and cultural divisions.

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Five months after the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk during a discussion on transgender gun rights, the Trump administration's proposed initiative to restrict firearm access for transgender individuals remains stalled. The Department of Justice considered measures to prevent those with gender dysphoria from obtaining guns following a series of shootings, but sources indicate no further progress. Kirk's death highlighted ongoing debates over transgender violence and Second Amendment concerns.

In an interview with Le Monde, political science professor Carole Bachelot reviews 2025, marked by the fragility of successive governments, lengthy budget negotiations, and the incarceration of a former president. She attributes the instability less to a conflictual culture than to the centrality of the presidential election. The expert assesses the situation of the Macron camp, the right, and the left amid debates over the 2026 budget.

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A deadly shooting during finals week at Brown University in Rhode Island and an antisemitic terrorist attack at Sydney’s Bondi Beach during a Hanukkah celebration have together left at least 18 people dead and dozens wounded, sharpening debates about gun violence, ideology and security in countries long seen as having relatively strict firearms laws.

Tensions within the MAGA movement surfaced prominently on the first night of Turning Point USA's America Fest conference in Phoenix, Arizona, as speakers traded criticisms amid debates over antisemitism and American identity. The event, the largest since founder Charlie Kirk's death in September, drew over 30,000 attendees, including many young conservatives. Erika Kirk, the organization's new CEO, endorsed Vice President JD Vance for president in 2028.

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The number of counseling cases at the 'Starke Stelle' for local politicians affected by hate and incitement rose sharply in 2025. The service supported over 260 people seeking advice, compared to 120 in its first year. Experts warn of risks to democracy.

 

 

 

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