The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Beware of Democrats, a menace to public safety

- Dana Milbank Columnist

So President Trump is worried there will be violence if the Democrats win in November.

“They will overturn everything that we’ve done, and they’ll do it quickly and violently — and violently,” Trump reportedly told evangelica­l Christian leaders at a private White House dinner Monday. Citing Antifa (anarchists, not Democrats) and “some of these groups,” Trump added, “these are violent people.”

His concern is entirely understand­able. The Democrats are a menace to public safety. It is time to hit this threat to domestic tranquilit­y right between the eyes — and to arm teachers with guns just in case a Democrat wanders into one of their classrooms looking for trouble.

This week, for example, I was sure Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts was about to cane Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina on the Senate floor (restarting the 1856 feud in which a South Carolinian attacked Massachuse­tts Sen. Charles Sumner). Fortunatel­y, an overheard remark about income distributi­on tables distracted Warren from unleashing American carnage.

Peace-loving people recoil at the violence Democrats have shown themselves capable of: Democratic Rep. Greg Gianforte of Montana was sentenced to community service and angermanag­ement classes for assaulting a reporter on the eve of his election, and Democratic Rep. Michael Grimm of New York once threatened on the night of the State of the Union to throw a reporter off a balcony, saying, “I’ll break you in half. Like a boy.”

Wait — strike that. Gianforte and Grimm are Republican­s.

But surely, Americans recall the Democrats’ violent rhetoric on the campaign trail:

Hillary Clinton: “Knock the crap out of them, would you? Seriously, OK? ... I promise you I will pay for the legal fees.”

Tim Kaine: “I’d like to punch him in the face, I’ll tell you.”

Remember, too, when Bernie Sanders said he’d like to “see what happens” if his opponent lost Secret Service protection and suggested “the Second Amendment people” should be able to attack her judicial nominees?

Oops — my bad, again. Those were all things Trump said.

The man has a knack for blaming his opponents for the exact offense he has committed.

The violent talk has consequenc­es, and not just in the death threats visited on journalist­s.

Civil rights groups report a surge in hate crimes, anti-Semitic incidents and the like since Trump’s rise. Some, such as the Comet Ping Pong pizzeria gunman, are clearly tied to conspiracy theorists Trump has helped to boost.

One suspects Schumer, required to listen to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s daily lickspittl­e routine on the Senate floor, might fantasize about one day turning to his good friend from Kentucky and punching the gentleman in his honorable nose. But in real life he must content himself by attempting to fell McConnell with a withering turn of phrase.

And New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler, the 5-foot-4 ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, could be forgiven for daydreamin­g about landing a roundhouse kick to the chin of Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte when he abuses procedures to silence opposition.

In real life, Nadler can only raise a point of parliament­ary inquiry.

Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani, by contrast, is talking about armed rebellion. If Trump is impeached, Giuliani announced, from a golf cart in Scotland, “the American people would revolt.”

There is indeed something revolting about all this, but it isn’t the American people.

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