The Daily Courier

Deluded Trump is making stale threats terrifying again

- EDWARD KEENAN

DALTON, Ga. — “I don’t do rallies for other people,” President Donald Trump told a rally Monday nominally in support of two Republican Senate candidates. “I do them for me.” If that wasn’t already clear, Trump went on to spend the vast bulk of his speech focused not on the campaigns of Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who faced voters Tuesday in a run-off election that will determine who controls the Senate, but on his own defeat in the election in November. Specifical­ly, he spent most of his speech insisting that he hadn’t actually lost.

“The fact is we won the presidenti­al election, we won it big,” he said. “The Democrats are trying to steal the election.”

And like your least favourite uncle on Facebook, he then spent a long time promoting an exhaustive list of thoroughly debunked conspiracy theories about voter fraud. It was the VIP grievance treatment Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger had privately received on Saturday, extended publicly to a more a receptive audience on Monday.

It was a cold night, by Georgia standards. Chilly enough that many of those who had waited for hours in the cold to hear the outgoing president wore toques and gloves — though few wore COVID masks — at the outdoor municipal airport. The crowd wasn’t complainin­g. This may be Trump’s last major rally as president, and the crowd who bussed and hiked in to see it were there for the president, more so than for the Senate candidates. The biggest cheer Loeffler got was when she announced from the stage that she’d oppose receiving the Electoral College votes in the Senate as part of Trump’s no-hope attempt to overturn the election results in congress.

“Fight for Trump! Fight for Trump!” the crowd chanted.

“It should be ‘Fight for America,’” Trump said, in what would count as a rare moment of humility — if you didn’t already have the sense that he deeply believes his interests and the country’s are the same thing.

You can imagine a parallel universe in which an event like this, two weeks before a successor is inaugurate­d, is a great swan song for an outgoing president. A chance to list accomplish­ments, thank supporters, and rally them to vote for the party in the stillalive Senate run-off in order to keep the hope, and the legacy alive.

Indeed, perhaps surprising­ly, that is the speech Donald Trump Jr. gave. Mugging like a profession­al wrestler and riffing like a standup comic, the president’s son implored those who supported Trump’s agenda to vote for the Republican Senate candidates as a last line of defence against the whims of a Biden presidency. He suggested the idea of sitting out the election as revenge against the “rigged” process they believe cost his father the election — as some Trump supporters have suggested and one billboard on I-75 urged Georgians to do — was the stupidest idea ever heard in politics.

Yet when his father took the stage, revenge was very much on his mind. President Trump took his traditiona­l digs at Democrats (inspiring one more “Lock her up” chant for the road with his imagining Hillary Clinton whining because no one cheated on her behalf) and Sen. Mitt Romney, but he drew bigger cheers when he vowed to come back to Georgia in two years to campaign against Republican Gov. Brian Kemp for not supporting his efforts to discredit the election in Georgia. He expressed his anger at the Supreme Court for its gall in refusing to take up his case. He singled out Republican Sen. Mike Lee in the audience as a target of his anger, imploring him to do as Loeffler had done and join his quixotic attempt to undermine democracy.

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