Trump makes hardline pitch at two rallies
President Donald Trump fought on Friday to recover from sinking election polls by campaigning with a hardline pitch to America’s right wing, claiming at crucial rallies in Florida and Georgia that if his Democratic opponent Joe Biden becomes the American president, he would deliver communism and a “flood” of criminal immigrants.
While Trump put on a brave face, the fact that he was fighting at all for the two southern states he won four years ago illustrated how much ground he has to make up against Biden in the 18 days left until the election.
With his polls sliding and US Covid-19 infections spiking, Trump is focusing entirely on his core Republican base, in hopes that highly energised supporters will turn out in huge numbers.
In Ocala, Florida, the coronavirus was an afterthought. Instead, Trump tossed the large, loudly cheering crowd red meat on immigration, race, and his conspiracy theory that Biden is steeped in corruption. Spicing his speech with lurid exaggerations, Trump claimed that the “Biden family is a criminal enterprise”.
He said Democrats “have nothing but disdain for your values” and “want to turn America into a communist country” - a reprise of his successful 2016 message tapping into white, working-class resentment.
“It’s time we sent a message to these wealthy liberal hypocrites,” he told the cheering crowd in Macon, Georgia on Friday night.
Trump also dived into racially charged comments on Latin American migrants, saying Democrats will “flood your communities with illegal aliens, drugs, crime”.
He lashed out at one of his most outspoken critics, the Somali-American Democratic congresswoman Ilhan Omar, saying “she hates our country”
and “comes from a place that doesn’t even have a government”.
Trump had still more venom for journalists, whom he called “the enemy of the people”. And he seemed to acknowledge things might not go his way in the end.