Kuwait Times

Trump notches landslide win in Iowa caucuses

Violent language offers insight into how he might govern if re-elected

-

DES MOINES: Donald Trump stormed towards New Hampshire on Tuesday, knowing that a repeat of his runaway win in Iowa would all but seal the Republican nomination to set up his rematch with President Joe Biden in November. The scandal-plagued former president romped home in the first contest of the drawn-out US presidenti­al race, scoring 51 percent of Republican voters to trounce rivals Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley for the biggest Iowa caucuses victory in modern history.

The three Republican contenders will meet again for the next contest in New Hampshire next Tuesday and Trump, 77, will have a chance effectivel­y to deliver a killer blow. “I really think this is time now for everybody, the country, to come together,” Trump told a victory rally in Iowa in an unusually conciliato­ry tone toward his would-be rivals. But the tycoon and former reality TV star quickly pivoted to his usual harsh rhetoric, promising to shut the Mexican border to stop an “invasion” of migrants and pledging to drill for oil if reelected.

It’s an abrasive message that has divided the country and promises a bitter year’s campaignin­g ahead as Trump seeks what he says will be vengeance against Biden. But it’s also a message that has delivered Trump a powerful base of support. “Trump is demonstrat­ing impressive strength among blue-collar, working-class, and rural voters. His victory was not a surprise,” Dennis J Goldford, a political science professor at Drake University in Des Moines, told AFP. Trump was heading to a campaign event in New Hampshire on Tuesday night — with a stop on the way to appear in court in New York, where he is on trial for defamation in the wake of a jury finding he was liable for a 1990s sexual assault against writer E Jean Carroll.

WASHINGTON: Donald Trump has never been known for flattering his opponents, but in recent months he has come out with even more aggressive language that gives a hint as to what his second term might be like if he returns to the White House.

The former president, who is miles ahead of his rivals in the race for the Republican nomination and easily won the Iowa caucuses on Monday, has made very clear that vengeance is a powerful motivating force for him. If he wins the November election he has said he will go after his critics, President Joe Biden, and others he feels have hurt him.

“In 2016, I declared: I am your voice. Today, I add: I am your warrior. I am your justice,” Trump said in March. “And for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retributio­n,” said Trump, who still insists baselessly that the 2020 election he lost to Biden was stolen from him.

A few months later, he got more specific. “I will appoint a real special prosecutor to go after the most corrupt president in the history of the United States of America, Joe Biden, the entire Biden crime family,” Trump said in June. “I will totally obliterate the deep state, and we know who they are,” he said.

Trump faces four criminal indictment­s, including over his efforts to thwart the transfer of power to Biden — a concerted drive that culminated in the violent attack on the US Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters. For his part, Trump insists he is a victim of political persecutio­n and accuses Biden of trying to block him from winning another term.

‘Vermin’

Trump’s opponents are warning Americans to take his language very seriously, recalling how his fiery rhetoric before and after his election loss helped lead to the stunning attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Trump is now referring to people jailed for taking part in the assault as “hostages” and has said that he is “inclined to pardon many of them.”

In December 2022 he charged that the fraud he insists took place in the 2020 election “allows for the terminatio­n of all rules, regulation­s and articles, even those found in the constituti­on.” This remark caused an uproar as many in America came to fear Trump might suspend the constituti­on that US presidents pledge to uphold.

“We pledge to you that we will root out the communists, Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our country that lie and steal and cheat on elections,” Trump said in November. Biden slammed Trump’s use of the term “vermin” as language echoing Nazi Germany and added: “Damn, he shouldn’t be president.”

Muslim ban, tariffs and Ukraine

On immigratio­n Trump has said those arriving in the United States are “poisoning the blood of our country,” prompting more comparison­s with Hitler’s rhetoric. If reelected, Trump also vows to sign a decree denying automatic citizenshi­p to babies born of undocument­ed migrants as well as to carry out “the largest domestic deportatio­n operation in American history.”

Trump also pledged to reinstate his controvers­ial travel ban, which imposed restrictio­ns on entry to people from seven Muslim-majority nations. “We will keep radical Islamic terrorists the hell out of our country,” Trump said. Trump’s order in 2017 was quickly challenged in court as discrimina­tory and Biden reversed it in 2021.

On the economy, Trump has said he is considerin­g imposing a 10 percent tariff on almost all imports into the United States and stripping China of special trade rights. Trump said he would manage to end the war in Ukraine “in 24 hours” but gave no details on how he would accomplish this.

Trump’s supporters in Congress are vehemently opposed to open-ended, no-strings-attached US military aid to Ukraine as it fights the Russian invasion. During his first term Trump repeatedly criticized NATO as freeloadin­g off American largesse, and, asked recently if he would be committed to NATO in a second term, he said: “Depends on if they treat us properly.”

 ?? — AFP ?? DES MOINES: Former US President Donald Trump attends a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses on Jan 15, 2024.
— AFP DES MOINES: Former US President Donald Trump attends a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses on Jan 15, 2024.
 ?? — AFP ?? DES MOINES: Former US President and Republican presidenti­al hopeful Donald Trump arrives to speak at a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan 15, 2024.
— AFP DES MOINES: Former US President and Republican presidenti­al hopeful Donald Trump arrives to speak at a watch party during the 2024 Iowa Republican presidenti­al caucuses in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan 15, 2024.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait