The video was only seconds long, but the image was unmistakable.
A guillotine. A severed head that looked like Donald Trump.

And a sitting North Carolina lawmaker sharing it with the world.
Within hours, Representative Julie von Haefen was in full retreat.
Accounts deleted. A hasty apology. A claim she had edited out the worst part. But the outrโฆ
The controversy around Julie von Haefen has become a test of political boundaries in a country already on edge.
Her apology and insistence that she condemns political violence have done little to calm
critics who argue that an elected official cannot simply โedit outโ a symbol of execution and move on.
For Republicans, the guillotine sign crystallizes what they see as a double standard on violent rhetoric, especially when it targets Donald Trump.
Democrats now face a painful dilemma: defend a colleague and risk appearing to excuse extremist imagery,
or distance themselves and fuel calls for her resignation.
Beyond von Haefenโs fate, the uproar exposes how quickly protest symbolism can morph into a national flashpoint, especially when amplified online.
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