TRUMP PREDICTS VIOLENCE IN NOVEMBER. THAT’S RICH
Is he serious? Does President Donald Trump really think there will be “violence” from the left if Republicans lose control of Congress in the November midterms? Isn’t the whole point of winning an election to get what you want without turning to violence?
Yet, “violence” was in Trump’s forecast in a closed-door meeting with evangelical leaders recently at the White House, according to audio obtained by NBC and The New York Times.
“They will overturn everything that we’ve done, and they’ll do it quickly and violently, and violently,” Trump said. “There’s violence. When you look at Antifa, and you look at some of these groups — these are violent people.”
Sometimes. But Antifa, a loosely knit, far-left movement, tends to live up to its name, which is short for “anti-fascist,” by showing up at far-right-wing events, such as the infamous rally by torch-bearing white supremacists in Charlottesville, Va., last year.
Is Trump serious? Or is he just describing a movie that’s playing in his own head?
After all, Trump has hardly been a peacenik when it comes to cheerleading for violence. After a protester interrupted a Las Vegas rally in February 2016, he growled, “I’d like to punch him in the face, I’ll tell ya.”
At a rally in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, he told supporters to “knock the crap out of ” would-be hecklers.
Yet, Trump told the religious leaders, “The level of hatred, the level of anger is unbelievable” on the left, as if his own habit of rooting for violence was not well known.
But talking about the ragtag Antifa group helped Trump avoid other awkward issues, such as his own rather unchaste Ten Commandments violations alleged by stripper Stormy Daniels.
Expressing a willingness to look the other way as long as Trump delivers with his appointment of conservative Supreme Court justices, Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council famously said of the Daniels case that Trump should “get a mulligan … get a do-over.”
Trump may well get another mulligan for urging the Christian leaders in the White House meeting to break federal law by openly supporting him from the pulpit.
Among other achievements that he said they must preserve, he claimed to have overturned the provision in federal tax law known as the Johnson Amendment that bars churches from endorsing political candidates. He not only cannot overturn a law without congressional approval, but the executive order he signed is worded in a way that leaves the Johnson Amendment untouched.
It’s not nice to spread falsehoods, especially to religious leaders. But as they are encouraged by today’s culture wars to feel like an oppressed minority, it’s not shocking to see evangelicals view him as a secular “savior,” the label some Trump conservatives have used to mock Barack Obama’s supporters.
As for Trump, his desperation appears to be showing. It is not Antifa that has fear percolating in his heart. It’s Democratic voters. They’re energized.
His disapproval rating hit 60 percent, a new high, in a poll released Friday by The Washington Post and ABC News.
Even his declaration at recent rallies that, “Yes, we’re building the wall” (the one he promised on the U.S.-Mexico border) is a falsehood — and Mexico still isn’t paying for it.
But his words apparently do have an impact. Robert Chain, 68, of Encino, California, was arrested and charged Thursday with making “credible” threats of violence to Boston Globe employees, calling the newspaper the “enemy of the people.”
Yes, that’s the Stalinesque label Trump gives to media that deliver news that Trump doesn’t like. We media workers are not enemies of the people. We’re just people Trump wants to call his enemy.