A wave of business leaders offered supportive words and condemnations of political violence in the hours and days after Donald Trump survived an assassination attempt.
President Joe Biden also condemned the attack, calling on Americans to "cool it down" in a rare address from the Oval Office.
A shooter opened fire during a campaign rally near Butler, Pa., on Saturday evening, and Trump was injured when his ear was pierced before he was rushed away by the Secret Service. One member of the audience was killed.
"I pray for President Trump's rapid recovery," wrote Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook, adding: "I strongly condemn this violence."
It was a sentiment shared by many.
"We’re heartbroken for the victims and their families," added Walmart (WMT) CEO Doug McMillon in his own comment.
"Just awful," said Amazon (AMZN) CEO Andy Jassy.
Jassy's predecessor, Jeff Bezos, added that "our former president showed tremendous grace and courage under literal fire tonight."
The supportive sentiments were seen across the political and business worlds and shared by many top C-suite leaders, including some who have clashed with Trump over the years.
"Praying for a quick recovery for President Trump," wrote Meta (META) CEO Mark Zuckerberg. "Political violence undermines democracy and must always be condemned."
Other similar statements were seen from figures from the CEO of Microsoft (MSFT) to Airbnb (ABNB) to Alphabet (GOOG) to BlackRock (BLK) and others.
"A very difficult night for our nation," added Intel (INTC) CEO Pat Gelsinger.
Trump was taken to a hospital after the attack and assessed before being released. He posted a thanks to first responders online.
The former president followed up on Sunday morning by saying he is looking forward to speaking later this week at the Republican National Convention. He then traveled to Milwaukee where the proceedings are set to begin on Monday evening.
The Secret Service says that the suspected shooter was killed after making an attack "from an elevated position outside of the rally venue." Two other rally attendees were critically injured.
President Joe Biden and other political leaders in both parties offered their support, as did world leaders. The president said in his televised remarks that "there is no place in America for this kind of violence. It's sick. It's sick."
He then spoke to Trump on the phone later in the evening and followed up with more appearances Sunday from the White House, including an address to the nation where he announced a national security review of the incident.