Tag: Trump

  • How Biden should use Trump’s conviction against him

    How Biden should use Trump’s conviction against him

    Next, it is vitally important that the White House underscore through its actions that as in all judicial matters it plays a hands-off role—that this trial and all other trials involving Trump are not in any way being interfered with for political reasons despite GOP lies to the contrary. (The fact that the Hunter Biden trial begins next week neatly and compellingly provides evidence of that fact.)

    Finally, as the commentator in the Huffington Post noted, there is no need for the president, the vice president, or the White House to emphasize that Trump is a convicted felon because it is a label that has been forever affixed to his name. Those who don’t care, won’t care. But for those to whom it matters, the news was so massive that it cannot be ignored and it will not be forgotten.

    Should the President make passing reference to it when it is relevant? Of course. Should he and his surrogates condemn the orchestrated MAGA GOP attack on the rule of law in America, on the jurors who did their duty, on the prosecutors who diligently compiled and presented the evidence in the case? Definitely. The disgraceful Republican onslaught—coordinated across all 50 GOP state parties—cuts to one of the core issues the White House does intend to emphasize: the threat Trump and his MAGA followers pose to our institutions and to democracy in America. It should be highlighted from dawn to dusk because it is so pernicious and dangerous.

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    But we should also be clear on the fact that campaign 2024 is not solely about pronouncements by the presidential candidates. The public debate will include, thanks to social media, millions of voices. The most prominent of those—and average Democrats with just a handful of followers—on the leading web-based platforms do not work within the constraints that should and do affect the president and other senior officials.

    The fact that Trump is a felon, sexual abuser, fraudster, and a traitor, the fact of all of his 91 felony indictments, the intersection of his criminal and legal record with his two impeachments, and his lifetime of deceit, corruption, and business failure, his role as a coup plotter, as author of the big lie, his theft of national secrets… all these things compose the picture of who Trump is that must be conveyed as Huppke and Sargent and others argue.

    Down-ballot Democrats, senatorial and congressional candidates who see the benefit of hammering home the terrible reality of what another Trump term would mean should definitely incorporate this week’s verdict into their messaging. So too should independent political groups, the producers of the videos and other statements that will populate our information ecosystem from now through Election Day.

    In those cases, it is not merely about presenting the fact that Trump is a convicted felon. It is about weaving that fact into the broader narrative of his shameful character and of the threat another four years in office of this reprobate would mean.

    So, yes, while the president and senior officials conduct themselves with the dignity and responsibilities their offices demand and thus distinguish themselves from their unprincipled opponents, we should hear a chorus of voices from across the entire Democratic Party emphasizing that whereas Trump’s conviction was a historical first, we cannot afford to set another precedent by making Trump the first convicted felon to be elected president of the United States.

    · This article was originally published in www.thedailybeast.com with the headline ‘This Is How Biden Should Use Trump’s Conviction Against Him’

  • Trump campaign raises $53 million in donations after guilty verdict

    Trump campaign raises $53 million in donations after guilty verdict

    Donald Trump’s campaign said Friday it had raised nearly $53 million in online small-dollar donations after he was convicted in his New York hush money trial, boasting that the verdict had galvanized his support “like never before.”

    The record haul was equivalent to more than $2 million raised per hour, it said.

    Senior campaign aides Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles said in statements that more than a third of the total came from new donors to the campaign and hailed an “outpouring of support from patriots across our country.”

    Calling the Thursday court decision a “sham trial verdict” the advisors reported that the “digital fundraising system was overwhelmed with support” despite temporary online delays “because of the amount of traffic” from small-dollar donors.

    Read Also: Here’s who Trump should blame: his lawyers

    As of Friday evening, the day’s total had climbed to a whopping $52.8 million.

    A jury convicted Trump Thursday on all 34 charges of falsifying business records to cover up a sex scandal in the final stages of the 2016 presidential campaign.

    Prosecutors said Trump had sex with porn actress Stormy Daniels soon after his wife Melania had given birth in 2006, and then paid hush money a decade later to avoid the fallout and deceive voters, before creating false paperwork to conceal the payment.

    He is due for sentencing on July 11 but is expected to appeal the verdict.

    NEWSNOW

  • Here’s who Trump should blame: his lawyers

    Here’s who Trump should blame: his lawyers

    • By Shan Wu

    By the time the jury reached its verdict finding former President Donald J. Trump guilty on all 34 counts of the charges brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office, there was little doubt there would be no acquittal forthcoming for the former president. Deliberating for less than two days, the jury’s speed in reaching a decision was noteworthy and likely due to the strength of the case.

    While it is not true that fast verdicts are always pro-defense or pro-prosecution, they do indicate that the evidence has been powerful for one side or the other, because it is not easy for twelve people to agree on the guilt of a defendant.

    There was little doubt that there would be an acquittal because acquittals happen when either the prosecution makes a misstep, such as having a problem with a witness, or chooses to bring a case where the direct evidence is weak and where the defense is able to present a coherent powerful counter-narrative. As the trial progressed it was obvious that neither of those scenarios were likely.

    Starting with the opening statement of Trump lead defense counsel, Todd Blanche, who managed to draw objections that were sustained by Judge Juan Merchan, the defense stumbled out of the gate and kept stumbling. It’s rare for there to be objections during an opening statement due in equal parts to professional courtesy and because it is actually hard to say something outside the bounds given that the opening is merely a promise of what the jury will see.

    Blanche managed to blunder into this unusual problem only because he apparently tried to raise points such as an advice-of-counsel defense which the judge had already rejected. The cross-examination by both defense counsel. Blanche and Susan Necheles, then only worsened matters as each in their own way managed to bolster the prosecution rather than weaken it.

    Necheles cross-examined actor/director Stormy Daniels in a bullying, shaming style that utterly undermined any advantage to having a female cross-examine another female to avoid the optics of a man being harsh towards a female witness. Such a strategy is often used in sex crimes cases, which this was not. But Necheles managed to give it the feel of one with Daniels being the brave victim in the face of a sexist, misogynistic attack that essentially tried to imply that Daniels’ work in the adult film industry made her morally unfit to be believed.

    The offensive nature of Necheles’ tactics was itself enough to turn the jury against Trump’s team, but Daniels made it even easier by shining during cross-examination, and repeatedly slam-dunking Necheles’ questions in the experienced lawyer’s face.

    Daniels was arguably a witness that had little material to say about the main elements of the charges—falsification of business records in order to interfere with an election—given that she had no knowledge of those facts. But, perhaps, at the insistence of Trump, Necheles turned what could have been a very minor part of the case into a bright display of Trump’s misogyny and arrogance.

    Blanche continued this pattern of failed cross-examination in his efforts at attacking the testimony of Michael Cohen—Trump’s former fixer-attorney—who was a central witness in the prosecution’s case. Cohen, who carried the baggage of having been convicted for lying to Congress about many of the very facts of this case as well as being convicted for tax fraud and campaign finance violations, was a good target for cross-examination.

    But instead of using these questions about his credibility to surgically raise doubt about particular aspects of his testimony, Blanche chose to apparently channel his inner Trump by literally yelling at Cohen that he was a “liar.” Such displays by a lawyer during cross-examination are seldom effective and proved particularly humiliating for Blanche given that he made Cohen—known to be volatile—look calm and reasonable in comparison to Blanche himself.

    Blanche’s closing continued his ranting about Cohen’s honesty, coming up with terms like Cohen being the “G.L.O.A.T”—greatest liar of all time. In short, Blanche relied on the idea that a person who has been dishonest in the past is always dishonest, instead of showing how and where he was being dishonest in this case.

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    In contrast, the prosecution presented an overwhelming case in methodical fashion. Their presentation of Cohen—with his potential vulnerabilities—was prefaced by a slew of corroborating testimony from witnesses and paper trails that followed the money. In so doing, they armored Cohen from Blanche’s attacks because the jury did not have to take Cohen’s word alone. They had receipts. Lots of them.

    Lead prosecutor Joshua Steinglass presented a masterly summation that lasted some four hours. Tirelessly and clearly weaving together the weeks of testimony for the jury, Steinglass even rhetorically asked the jury if they could hang in there with him as his closing argument went into the evening. That last touch helped him establish a rapport that Blanche failed so badly to do with the jury.

    Many critics of this case have disparaged it as being the “weakest” case against Trump; in my view much of that criticism is rooted in misogyny and privileged views of what kind of case is “worthy” of bringing against a rich, powerful man. The way justice should work is that prosecutions take place or don’t take place because of the facts surrounding the criminal acts, not the power or gender of the defendant.

    There will of course be appeals of Trump’s historic conviction and we do not yet know the outcomes of those. But what we do know is that the prosecution, trial, and conviction of Donald J. Trump was one example of justice being brought against the powerful. It is a scenario that is too infrequent in the world and in our country. But the fact that it did happen is a testament to the strength of American democracy and the integrity and skill of the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office.

    •This article was first published in www.thedailybeast.com

  • Judge threatens Trump with jail for violation of gag order

    Judge threatens Trump with jail for violation of gag order

    The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s criminal hush-money trial yesterday held him in criminal contempt for the 10th time and warned he could face jail for continued violations of a gag order.

     Juan Merchan’s admonition to Trump came in response to the Republican presidential frontrunner’s repeated commentary on trial witnesses and jurors, which flouts the judge’s order barring him from speaking about those who are testifying at the high-profile proceedings and panelists weighing his fate.

    Merchan’s decision which imposed a $1,000 fine came less than one week after Trump was held in criminal contempt and fined $9,000 for violating the gag order on other occasions. The order was in response to Trump’s comments on the jury, which described their selection as rushed.

     “Mr Trump, as you know the prosecution has filed three separate motions to find you in criminal contempt. It appears that the $1,000 fines are not a deterrent.

    Read Also: Donald Trump gag order reinstated in New York civil fraud trial

    “The last thing I want to do is put you in jail. You are the former president of the United States and possibly the next president as well … but at the end of the day, I have a job to do and part of that job is to protect the dignity of the judicial system,” Merchan said.

    He also said that Trump’s actions: “constitute a direct attack on the rule of law. I cannot allow that to continue.

    “So as much as I do not want to impose a jail sanction,” Merchan added sternly, “I want you to understand that I will, if necessary and appropriate.”

    The dramatic development unfolded moments after Trump entered Merchan’s courtroom for the 12th day of his criminal hush-money trial.

    Trump, wearing a deep blue suit, said “good morning” to someone as he crossed into the well, and dropped a set of papers onto the defense table, which fell with a low, orderly whack.

    The first witness called this week was Jeffrey McConney, former Trump Organization comptroller and senior vice-president. Through McConney’s testimony, the prosecution sought to show that Trump had intimate knowledge of his personal and companies’ finances – and that repayments to Cohen were out-of-the-ordinary for his boss.

  • Man sets himself on fire outside court during Trump trial

    Man sets himself on fire outside court during Trump trial

    A man set himself on fire in a park opposite the courthouse in New York during the ongoing criminal trial of former president Donald Trump, according to U.S. media reports.

    The man poured a liquid over himself and set himself alight, unanimous reports from various media outlets, including the New York Times and CNN revealed.

    Bystanders had screamed and tried to help, the reports said.

    After a short time, police officers arrived and extinguished the flames.

    Read Also: U.S presidential polls: Issues for and against Biden, Trump

    The man was then carried into an ambulance and driven away.

    It was initially unclear why he set himself on fire.

    The incident took place in Collect Pond Park, directly opposite the courthouse where the criminal trial of Trump is currently taking place.

    The courthouse is extensively cordoned off and numerous police officers are on permanent duty there.

    Dozens of media representatives with cameras and broadcast vans are gathered around it.

    Opponents and supporters of Trump are allowed to gather for demonstrations in the park, but so far only a few have done so on the days of the trial.

    The grounds are surrounded by barricades, but there are also open entrances.

    (dpa/NAN) 

  • U.S presidential polls: Issues for and against Biden, Trump

    U.S presidential polls: Issues for and against Biden, Trump

    When the President of the United States of America (U.S.A.), Joe Biden and his predecessor, Donald Trump, won their respective party nominations, it wasn’t a surprise to many. But, ahead of the November presidential election, IBRAHIM ADAM thinks through warning signs for both candidates and if Biden could benefit from the State of the Union address.

    The results of the Georgia, Mississippi and Washington primaries have cemented what analysts and observers of U.S elections have described as Biden and Trump’s rematch for the office of the President of the United States, as they have secured the Democratic and Republican Party nominations, respectively.

    Biden, who had no major rivals in his party, cleared the required 1,968 delegate threshold to be nominated, while Trump also exceeded the 1,215 delegate threshold.

    The two candidates will be officially nominated at their respective conventions in July and August.

    In his third State of the Union speech which lasted for 90 minutes, President Joe Biden emphasised the economic achievements of his administration and set himself apart from his predecessor. The State of the Union is “getting stronger and stronger and America is coming back,” he said.

    The coast became clearer for Donald Trump after his opponent, and former South Carolina Governor, Nikki Haley, withdrew from the Presidential race following Trump’s victory in 15 states and one territory, excluding Vermont at the Super Tuesday.

    President Joe Biden, after the Super Tuesday, warned of an “existential” national threat and “darkness” if his Republican rival wins the race for the White House. Four years ago, I ran because of the existential threat Donald Trump posed to the America we all believe in.

    “Tonight’s results leave the American people with a clear choice: Are we going to keep moving forward or will we allow Donald Trump to drag us backwards into the chaos, division and darkness that defined his term in office?” Biden wrote in a statement. 

    Immigration

    Trump used harsh and divisive tactics, such as dividing families at the border and using heated rhetoric to warn of the dangers of migrants. Biden advocated for a more compassionate strategy that would be in line with the aspirational values of America throughout the 2020 election campaign.

    Calling the unprecedented influx of asylum seekers a “border crisis,” Biden has, in recent weeks, advocated legislation that could temporarily seal the border and speed up deportations. He no longer makes mention of the early goal of giving “Dreamers,” or those brought into the country illegally as children, a route to citizenship.

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    The Trump administration’s deportation policies changed after Biden came into office, and as a result, there was a significant reduction in the number of individuals being deported from the country.

    This has been a significant distinction between the two governments. With Biden allegedly considering executive actions to speed up deportations for new arrivals, especially for those who do not qualify for asylum, the disparity may be closing slightly.

    In contrast, if Trump wins the election to the presidency, he has promised to conduct the “largest deportation operation” in US history to remove illegal immigrants. He then promised to employ the National Guard to carry out his intentions.

    Democrats, especially Biden, swore not to build “another foot of wall” when he assumed office and strongly criticised Donald Trump’s flagship border wall-building strategy.

    Republicans and Democrats criticised Biden last year after his administration unveiled plans to build a new border wall in Texas, which will be around 20 miles (32 km) of barriers constructed in a region of the Rio Grande Valley that is not heavily populated.

    Biden said he “had no choice” because funding for the construction was signed while Trump was president.

    “I tried to get them to redirect that money. They didn’t, they wouldn’t. I can’t stop that.” Biden said.  At his campaign rallies around the United States, Trump has persisted in promoting the building of border barriers.

    For the first time, according to a Monmouth University survey conducted on February 27, most Americans are in favour of building a border wall, with 53 per cent of respondents supporting the idea.

    During the State of the Union speech, Biden criticised lawmakers for failing to pass a bipartisan border bill that was met with strong resistance from House Republicans and put the blame for the bill’s failure on Trump.

    He said that the bill would have resulted in the hiring of 1,500 border security officers and an additional 100 immigration judges to assist in clearing the backlog of cases in the immigration system.    “The bill would save lives, and bring order to the border.

    “I’m told my predecessor called members of Congress in the Senate and demanded they block the bill. He feels it would be a political win for me and a political loss for him. It’s not about him. It’s not about me.

    “My Republican friends you owe it to the American people to get this bill done. We need to act. And if my predecessor is watching instead of playing politics and pressuring members of Congress to block this bill, join me in telling Congress to pass it!

    “We can do it together. But here’s what I will not do. I will not demonise immigrants saying they poison the blood of our country as he said in his own words. I will not separate families.

    “I will not ban people from America because of their faith. Unlike my predecessor, on my first day in office, I introduced a comprehensive plan to fix our immigration system, secure the border, and provide a pathway to citizenship for dreamers and so much more, because, unlike my predecessor, I know who we are as Americans.

    “We are the only nation in the world with a heart and soul that draws from old and new; home to Native Americans whose ancestors have been here for thousands of years, home to people from every place on Earth.

    Israel, Gaza and Ukraine

     In 2020, Biden used his rich background in foreign policy to describe Trump as a danger to American interests and allies globally.

    Biden is now facing his toughest challenge with a protest vote against his support of Israel in the ongoing conflict with Hamas in Palestine.

    More than 100,000 voters or 13 per cent of the total marked their ballots in the Michigan primary as “uncommitted,” expressing their disapproval of the President’s position on the Gaza War, sending a warning shot to Biden one week before Super Tuesday.

    Biden announced during his State of the Union speech that his administration would construct a “temporary pier” off the coast of Palestine to make humanitarian supplies easier.

    This, he said, will make it easy to receive large shipments carrying food, water, medicine and temporary shelter available for the Palestinians.

    Biden admitted that the war has taken a greater toll on innocent civilians with over “30, 000 killed” and said the only solution is a two-state solution.

    The U.S. President warned the Israeli leadership against using aid to Gaza as a bargaining chip as he described the ongoing war as “gut-wrenching.”

    “This war has taken a greater toll on innocent civilians than all previous wars in Gaza combined. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed. Thousands and thousands are innocent women and children. Girls and boys were also orphaned. Nearly two million more Palestinians are under bombardment or displaced. Homes destroyed neighbourhoods in rubble, cities in ruin. Families are without food, water, and medicine. It’s heartbreaking,” he said.

    Biden also pledged to work to bring every hostage home, pointing to American families whose loved ones are still being held by Hamas.

    On Ukraine, Biden stressed that he has been a “lifelong supporter” of the U.S. ally.

    Economy

    At the State of the Union speech, President Biden revealed that he inherited an economy “on the brink” during the COVID-19 pandemic, but his policies helped revive it.

    Biden also paid a nod to U.S. labour unions and the American middle class, while stressing that he plans to ensure that corporations pay their fair share.

    “I came to office determined to get us through one of the toughest periods in our nation’s history. And we have. It doesn’t make the news but in thousands of cities and towns, the American people are writing the greatest comeback story never told.

    “So let’s tell that story here and now. America’s comeback is building a future of American possibilities, building an economy from the middle out and the bottom up, not the top down, investing in all of America, in all Americans to make sure everyone has a fair shot and we leave no one behind!

    “The pandemic no longer controls our lives. The vaccines that saved us from COVID-19 are now being used to help beat cancer. We have turned setbacks into comebacks. That’s America! I inherited an economy that was on the brink. Now our economy is the envy of the world. 15 million new jobs in just three years, that’s a record. Unemployment is at 50-year lows.

    “A record 16 million Americans are starting small businesses and each one is an act of hope; with historic job growth and small business growth for Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans, 800,000 new manufacturing jobs in America and counting,”

    Biden explained that inflation in the country has dropped from nine per cent to three per cent.

    Trump’s threat

    Trump’s language hasn’t changed. He lost his primary platform when he was banned from Twitter in 2021. This may be a political benefit for him since fewer people experience his attacks. While some ignore his remarks that once could have raised eyebrows.

    He was not disqualified from the nomination even after being charged with 91 felonies. Rather, it has energised his core supporters.

    However, 33 per cent of North Carolina Republican primary voters and 40 per cent of Virginia Republican primary voters agreed that Trump would not be fit to serve as president if he were found guilty of a crime.

    Gun control

    Biden made a strong statement on reducing gun violence. The President made scathing remarks on Trump’s administration’s inaction on gun violence alongside explaining the steps his administration had taken to stop mass shootings.

    “I did do something by establishing the first-ever Office of Gun Violence Prevention in the White House that Vice-President Harris is leading. I’m proud we beat the National Rifle Association (NRA) when I signed the most significant gun safety law in nearly 30 years,”

    In a blistering critique of Trump, the President said: “My predecessor told the NRA he’s proud he did nothing on guns when he was President.”

    At the podium, Biden declared: “Now we must beat the NRA again! I’m demanding a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines! Pass universal background checks! None of this violates the Second Amendment or vilifies responsible gun owners,”

    Age limit

     That’s a bigger problem for Biden. His age wasn’t a major factor when he was elected President in 2020, but at 78, he already held the record for the oldest President in American history.

    Republicans point to every misstep made by the 81-year-old Biden as proof that he is not mentally and physically capable of being president.

    Democrats also criticised Trump for his mistakes, pointing out that at 77, he confused Nikki Haley with Nancy Pelosi, and mistakenly identified Barack Obama as Joe Biden.

    Trump’s ‘bloodbath’ comment 

     Donald Trump has been criticised after he warned that there will be a ‘bloodbath’ should he lose the November election in a fiery speech where he also branded migrants ‘animals.’

    Trump painted an apocalyptic vision of the country if Biden wins a second term while speaking at an airfield rally outside of Dayton, Ohio, to campaign for Republican Senate candidate, Bernie Moreno.

    “If I don´t get elected, it´s going to be a bloodbath for the whole that´s going to be the least of it; it´s going to be a bloodbath for the country. If this election isn’t won, I’m not sure that you’ll ever have another election in this country,” Trump said.

    The outcry over his comments quickly poured onto X platform (formerly known as Twitter), as users branded Trump ‘hateful’ ‘grotesque’ and ‘a dangerous lunatic’ over both his ‘bloodbath’ comment and reference to migrants as ‘animals.’

    Reacting to this, former Speaker and a frequent political foe of the former President, Nancy Pelosi the remarks highlight how important it is for Democrats to re-elect Biden.

    “We just have to win this election because he’s even predicting a bloodbath. What does that mean? Is he going to exact a bloodbath? There’s something wrong here.

    “Praising Hitler, praising the Russians, honestly, I mean, condemning our soldiers for losing or dying in war or being captured in war.”

    Pelosi pleaded with the American public to take these issues into account when they head to the polls in November.

  • To Bloodbath or Not to Bloodbath: The troubling subtext of Trump’s rhetoric

    To Bloodbath or Not to Bloodbath: The troubling subtext of Trump’s rhetoric

    • It is a call for violence, it is only part of an ominous plan, and he is openly revealing it

    By Milan Sime Martinic

    “If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the country.”

    With those chilling words uttered at a rally in Ohio, Donald Trump issued an ominous threat cloaked in the equivocating language that has become his trademark.

    But beneath the veneer of ambiguity lay a disturbing subtext— the clearest signal yet that the former president views the 2024 election as an existential battle he and his supporters must be prepared to wage by any means necessary, including  violence.

    When Trump took the stage, the scene was rife with ignominious symbolism. An announcer instructed the crowd to rise and salute the insurrectionists of January 6th — the very people who sought to violently overturn the 2020 election through a brazen attack on American democracy.

    Trump himself stood and saluted as the so-called “J6 Prison Choir” performed the national anthem, lending an air of martyrdom to those arrested for their criminal acts that day.

    It was an opening salvo dripping with the same polluted brand of patriotism that fueled the January 6 Capitol assault. But it was merely a prelude to the full-throated demagoguery and barely veiled threats that would follow from the former president’s own lips.

    Much digital ink has already been spilled dissecting Trump’s particular turn of phrase when he warned of a “bloodbath for the country” if he fails to regain the presidency in 2024.

    Predictably, his supporters instantly claimed the comment was being taken out of context, insisting he merely meant economic calamity for the auto industry. But this willfully myopic interpretation cannot be given credence when viewed through the full prism of Trump’s lengthy diatribe.

    The charged language of “bloodbath” alone instantly calls to mind violent imagery utterly divorced from economic policy discussions.

    This is not mere coincidence.

    Trump has always shown a lacerating instinct for provocative language that electrifies his base. His words are bellows stoking the fires of division and unrest, crafted with deliberate arsonist’s care.

    Trump and is supporters claim that his use of “bloodbath” carried no malicious subtext despite history that shows his previous use of such rhetoric to incite real-world deadly violence.

    This is the man who stoked the Charlottesville tragedy with equivocations over white supremacy. The man who played coy about denouncing the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by.” Whose own heated language about the “stolen” 2020 election —which he again falsely insisted was “rigged” in Ohio— inspired the very insurrection he now chooses to glorify.

    In that context, it is gullible to divorce this latest combustible language from the full context of Trump’s unrelenting assault on democratic norms and institutions. To analyze the “bloodbath” comment as a mere economic prediction observation is to exhibit staggering intellectual dishonesty or woeful naivete about the true nature of his political movement, one in which he tells his followers that he will be their retribution.

    The context renders clear that this was a calculated dog whistle— a rhetorical hand grenade lobbed at his most fervid supporters to whip them into a vengeful frenzy should he fail to regain power “by any means necessary,” as his cult slogan insists.

    Indeed, Trump immediately buttressed his “bloodbath” remark by stating that if he loses in 2024, “I don’t think you’re going to have another election, or certainly not an election that’s meaningful.”

    Let that ominous assertion sink in.

    Combined with his “bloodbath” language, Trump was unmistakably implying that democratic defeat is not an outcome he or his supporters should accept— and that extralegal, potentially violent resistance could be required to “save” the nation from another “stolen” election.

    This pits him not only against democracy itself, but as conservative Republican Judge Michael Luttig warned, on a “path to instigate armed conflict against the United States.”

    Trump’s intertwined rhetoric forms a clear call to arms for his supporters to reject any 2024 result that displaces him from power. The historical precedent for demagogues invoking fears of a national “bloodbath” to incite fierce insurrectionist loyalty against democratic institutions is indisputable and inexpressibly grim. It hearkens to the kinds of eliminationist language that has fueled some of modern history’s most horrific atrocities.

    In 1994, Rwandan Hutu extremists called for a “final solution” to exterminate the Tutsi minority, resulting in a 100-day genocide that massacred an estimated 800,000 to 1 million people.

    Under Pol Pot’s deranged Khmer Rouge regime, Cambodia endured a similar genocide from 1975 to 1979 that killed 1.7 million perceived enemies through execution, forced labor, starvation and disease— all in pursuit of a twisted “societal transformation.”

    Even Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution in China from 1966 to 1976 deployed such apocalyptic rhetoric, calling for the purging of “counter-revolutionaries” in what became a nationwide orgy of violence that left millions dead.

    In each of these incomprehensible tragedies, bloodbaths were spurred by leaders that painted them as inhuman aberrations, an existential threat requiring the most extreme and brutal solution. Lest you think that Americans would never let that happen, read Trump’s rhetoric below; think January 6, 2020.

    In the same Ohio speech, Trump gave the game away when, in the same breath as predicting a “bloodbath,” he also referred to some immigrants as “animals” that “in my opinion” are not even “people.”

    This was his familiar, dehumanizing nativist sleight-of-hand— simultaneously firing a bigoted broadside at racial minorities while seeding the premise that some in America are less than fully human, and therefore less entitled to democratic rights or humane treatment.

    Whether Trump truly desires or intends to ignite such cataclysmic unrest is almost immaterial. The damage lies in his callous willingness to dangle such deeply disturbing insinuations in front of his most inflamed partisans, hinting at looming civil strife over election results they have already been primed to reject as fraudulent. After all, at what point does negligently starting a rhetorical fire become indistinguishable from intentionally setting one?

    Trump demonstrated on January 6th just how explosive his incendiary words could become, even if he didn’t personally wield a lighter at the Capitol. Now he casually toys with the idea of a “bloodbath” all over again, the consequences be damned.

    Perhaps most disturbingly, Trump’s increasingly unhinged rhetoric calls into question whether he is even moored in reality anymore regarding the sanctity of American democracy. During his Ohio speech, Trump bizarrely claimed that Joe Biden had somehow “beat Barack Hussein Obama” in a nationwide election — an utter absurdity that encapsulates how untethered he has become from basic facts and truth.

    It paints a portrait of a deeply disturbed demagogue and gives significance to the Democratic claim that he is unfit for power, operating in a complete alternate universe divorced from reality.

    Read Also: Trump under fire over ‘bloodbath’ comment

    “This is who Donald Trump is,” said a Biden campaign statement— “A loser who gets beat by over 7 million votes and then instead of appealing to a wider mainstream audience doubles down on his threats of political violence,”

    And yet, in this make-believe world he has constructed for himself and his followers, Trump freely traffics in eliminationist rhetoric of “bloodbaths” and existential fights for the survival of the nation itself. It is the language of fascistic death cults, not responsible democratic leadership.

    Only the most oblivious or deluded could fail to make the connection, say the Democrats. Trump’s “bloodbath” intimations are aimed squarely at these “non-people” he portrays as usurpers of the American state whose rightful custodians are his white civic nationalist allies.

    Given his prior normalization of political violence from the Proud Boys and others, it’s impossible to ignore the unmistakable racial menace underlying his words.

    Not content to merely threaten his political opponents and inalienable swaths of the electorate, Trump also resorted to vulgar personal attacks on prosecutors bravely upholding the rule of law against his criminal misconduct. He hurled a vulgarity at Fani Willis, the Georgia official prosecuting his criminal election interference, while deriding the California governor Newman as “Gavin New-scum.”

    Never has his projection of “Us vs. Them” grievance politics —the permanent campaigning that portrays all defenders of democracy as illegitimate enemies of the people— been laid quite so bare. Trump has gone beyond dog whistles.

    He is openly broadcasting his intent to defy the American system of self-governance, rallying his supporters to view electoral defeat as a justification for bloodthirsty insurrection.

    Ultimately, the furor over “bloodbath” is simply the latest skirmish in the war of democratic accountability that has eternally raged over Trump’s presidency:

    One side recognizes that —regardless of his “intent”— providing him an open media megaphone to transmit his anti-democratic poison unchecked only fertilizes the spread of his malignant cult following. The other sees covering up or downplaying his inflammatory rhetoric as a moral and journalistic failing of censorship, enabling Trump to construct a false reality for his followers.

    There is truth in both perspectives.

    The mere act of broadcasting Trump’s rantings, no matter how unfiltered, cannot tell the full horrifying story behind his descent into authoritarian psychosis. Yet for the same reason, distilling and contextualizing his vilest rhetorical insinuations remains an essential service to inform the public of the gathering anti-democratic storm he openly hopes to unleash.

    Where the media has too often failed is in clearly and forcefully branding Trump’s escalating eliminationist language for what it truly represents— the death rattle of American democracy itself.

    Various networks, including CNN, ran a ticker tape repeating that Trump had warned of an “economic bloodbath.” The labeling of it as an “economic” comment is merely a capitulation to Trump harkening about press unfairness to him. In kowtowing to him they forgot to be fair to their audiences, Trump has long benefited as the media have instinctively shied away from calling a raving demagogue a raving demagogue, enabling lies and lunacy to proliferate unchecked at catastrophic cost.

    Perhaps out of misguided notions of neutrality, perhaps out of fear of being perceived as taking “sides,” journalists have willfully downplayed or danced around the naked authoritarianism that has come to define Trump’s entire movement. Euphemizing his demagoguery as mere “discursive,” “freewheeling” rabble-rousing grossly distorts its fundamentally insurrectionist core.

    Too often, the dire implications of Trump’s sustained assault on democratic governance have been cloaked under an illusory patina of mere “newsworthiness” or gawking curiosity. His insistence that the 2020 election was “rigged” and his open threats of violence if he loses in 2024 are treated as just another set of claims to be politely fact-checked, rather than recognizing the rhetorical guidepost these lies represent.

    The only service media can provide at this juncture is clear-eyed recognition that when Trump wages rhetorical war on democratic governance, they cannot equivocate or maintain neutrality. To avoid taking a side is to take Trump’s side by default.

    Trump’s political persona is an attack targeting the American civic fabric.

    His “bloodbath” remarks and the avalanche of adjacent insurrectionist dog whistling are not a series of comments to be dispassionately weighed and presented as part of a “both sides” discussion of electoral issues. They are a disturbing glimpse into the abyss— an urgent direct mortal threat to America from its foremost enemy within.

    As the media and the rest of American society continue appeasing this authoritarian menace with complacency and equivocation, the blood that is ultimately shed will stain their hands as well. They cannot plead ignorance or neutrality in the face of the malicious antidemocratic dogma that has metastasized from far-right fever swamps into the rhetoric of a major political figure openly fomenting violence and unrest.

    In earlier times this would have been instantly recognized for what it truly is — unacceptable, undemocratic, and un-American. There can be no equivocation when the stakes are as high as they are now.

    Biden and the Democrats are out to draw a bright moral line. On one side stands the patriotic ideals of freedom and self-rule that have guided America for over two centuries. On the other is Trump’s personality cult, drunk on incitements of bloodshed and a thirst for permanent authoritarian rule.

    But to resist his authoritarian blandishments, to stand firmly athwart his aspiring tide of “bloodbath” and insurrection? Ah, there’s the rub. For such defiance, in Trump’s mind, invites only persecution and retaliation against those brave enough.  

    But how then to proceed? To interpret it for what it is? Or to believe that he was harmlessly referring to an economic bloodbath.

    The true dilemma that vexes America is one of response: To sheepishly cower from his authoritarian blandishments and the turmoil they portend? Or to meet this rising tide head-on, willing to endure the reprisals that such principled defiance would inevitably incur?

    To Bloodbath, or not to Bloodbath — that is the crucible before Americans.

  • Trump under fire over ‘bloodbath’ comment

    Trump under fire over ‘bloodbath’ comment

    Former U.S. president, Donald Trump is under fire after after warning that there will be a ‘bloodbath’ if he loses the November election in a fiery speech where he also branded migrants ‘animals.’

    Trump painted an apocalyptic vision of the country if Biden wins a second term while speaking at an airfield rally outside of Dayton, Ohio, over the weekend to campaign for Republican Senate candidate Bernie Moreno.

    The 77-year-old Republican frontrunner warned: “If I don´t get elected, it´s going to be a bloodbath for the whole – that´s going to be the least of it. It´s going to be a bloodbath for the country,”

    Later, Trump said: “If this election isn’t won, I’m not sure that you’ll ever have another election in this country,”

    Trump repeatedly noted his difficulty reading from his teleprompters, which could be seen visibly whipping in 35-mile-per-hour wind gusts.

    The outcry over his comments quickly poured onto Musk’s X platform, formerly known as Twitter, as users branded Trump as ‘hateful’ ‘grotesque’ and ‘a dangerous lunatic’ over both his ‘bloodbath’ comment and reference to migrants as ‘animals’. 

    Reacting to this, former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) underscored the stakes of the November election after former President Trump warned of a “blood bath” for the auto industry and the country if he doesn’t win a second term in the White House.

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    Pelosi, a frequent political foe of the former president, said the remarks highlight how important it is for Democrats that Biden win reelection.

    “We just have to win this election because he’s even predicting a blood bath.

    “What does that mean? He’s going to exact a blood bath? There’s something wrong here. How respectful I am of the American people and their goodness. But how much more do they have to see from him to understand that this isn’t what our country is about?

    “Praising Hitler, praising the Russians, honestly, I mean, condemning our soldiers for losing or dying in war or being captured in war.”

    Pelosi pleaded with the American public to take these issues into account when they head to the polls in November.

    “There’s something wrong here. So I just say, with all the respect in the world for voters and their right to make their decision, weigh these equities. How much are you concerned about women having the right to choose or LGBT people having the right to their lives that you would vote for him?”

  • And now the enfant terrible trumps l’Etat terrible

    And now the enfant terrible trumps l’Etat terrible

    Oh dear, oh dear, there can never be a dull moment in Nigeria, no matter the tragedies and tribulations. There is always room for some absurdist drama or some life sketches straight out of Eugene Ionesco’s Theatre of Chaos. This is perhaps what is responsible for the strange resilience of Nigerians and their baffling staying power, not to talk of the sheer psychological stamina. 

       Has anybody seen a video of newly minted lawyers, Barrister Omoyele Sowore and friend and comrade in arms, Barrister Deji Adeyanju, taking time off to exchange verbal howitzers with some delinquent staff of the EFCC as the duo casually strolled to the venue of their investiture?  Having taken the worse of the exchange and some memorable body blows, the EFCC retreated to their den with Sowore in hot pursuit. It is the crime buster that seemed to have gone bust.

       It is only in Nigeria that you can have this kind of bizarre entertainment, with the hunter rapidly becoming the hunted. It is not a reassuring sight to see EFCC officials whining like a toddler after some severe spanking. In a hint of unworthy melodrama,  one or two of the EFFC squad were even hinting of being subjected to persecution by Sowore and his accomplice.

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      This is as maudlin and mawkish as it can get. The organization ought to have known better than grasping at the tail of a bruised tiger like the veteran and battle-tested civil rights campaigner. Coming at a time when the public had almost lost total confidence in the capacity of the organization to effect its originating mandate but for the recent stirring performance of its new leadership, this can only be an exercise in further self de-marketing and demystification. If its officers are politically savvy and well-trained enough, they ought to have avoided a public brawl which could only have ended in utter tragedy had the situation deteriorated further.

       But there is some silver lining in every situation however terrible. First of all, congratulations are in order. It has taken a nasty spat to draw attention to the fact that while he was undergoing a deliberately convoluted trial for a treasonable offence, the irrepressible campaigner still had time and the concentration to finish his legal studies. This is a worthy tribute to the dogged and indomitable spirit of the average Nigeria. We urge Mr Sowore to take advantage of his status as a new member of the Nigerian bar. 

     Let us end with a parody of a famous song by an immortal Nigerian musical prodigy that Sowore himself holds in highest esteem. It was in honour of another irrepressible contrarian and prodigious gadfly, Kanmi Isola-Osobu, aka the guru.

    Luku lawyer, he no dey run ooo

    Luku lawyer, he no dey run ooo.

  • Trump can run, court rules

    Trump can run, court rules

    The United States Supreme Court has rejected an effort by C  do’s top court to kick Trump off the ballot under the 14th Amendment of the Constitution, which includes a section that would prohibit individuals from holding public office if they have participated in an insurrection.

    Trump’s critics have accused him of inciting and supporting the attack on the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, in an attempt to subvert the 2020 presidential election.

    The judgment is coming after Nikki Haley beat Donald Trump for the very first time in Washington, D.C., at the Republican primary on Sunday night.

    Haley won 62 percent while Trump scored 33 percent with only 2,035 voters participating. That makes Haley the first Republican woman to ever win a primary in U.S. history.

    Her win in Democrat-run and urban D.C. shakes Trump’s stronghold on nearly every facet of the Republican Party, but it isn’t expected to make a massive impact nationwide.

    “BIG WIN FOR AMERICA!!!” the ex-president wrote on his Truth social media platform after the Supreme Court’s decision.

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    The ruling ends efforts in Colorado, Illinois, Maine, and elsewhere to kick Trump off the ballot because he attempted to undo his loss in the 2020 election to his rival, Democratic President Joe Biden.

    It also comes a day before Super Tuesday (today), when the largest number of states hold their presidential primaries and caucuses.

    Trump is the frontrunner in the Republican presidential nomination and is widely expected to face off against Biden in November.

    The 14th Amendment bars people from holding US office, including the presidency, if they “have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof”.

    But the Supreme Court, which holds a 6-3 conservative majority, said yesterday that only Congress can enforce the provision against federal officeholders and candidates.