Khaleej Times

Conspiracy bug bites Republican camp

- AFP

allentown — Rigged election, biased media — Donald Trump regularly condemns alleged tactics aimed at derailing his bid for the White House, rhetoric that resonates with some supporters who are growing more mistrustfu­l.

The Republican presidenti­al nominee has offered no concrete proof to back up his allegation­s but, to differing degrees, many in his camp believe them.

A prime target is the media, which Trump accuses of not covering his campaign objectivel­y, while favoring his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in the November 8 election.

He says the media even launches unfounded attacks against him.

“Most of the news is negative or they don’t print it at all,” said Susan, a retiree in Philadelph­ia on the sidelines of a “flash mob” supporting Trump. She did not want to give her family name.

Emails released by anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks in late October revealed that a CNN analyst, who is the interim chair of the Democratic National Committee, shared questions with the Clinton campaign ahead of a CNN-hosted primary debate. The DNC chief, Donna Brazile, had already resigned from the TV network when the WikiLeaks bombshell landed, but the furor fed into Trump’s long-running argument that Clinton was given advance knowledge of debate questions.

“We have the WikiLeaks emails that confirm what I’ve been saying for years. They manipulate the polls,” said Tom Carroll, an activist who has organized dozens of flash-mobs in the Allentown area in Pennsylvan­ia.

“The Hillary campaign has been paying people to read them the dialogue and the narrative to the media.”

The conspiracy-minded in the Trump camp have scant confidence in public opinion polls, which overall give Clinton an edge in a race tightening in the final stretch.

“They oversample Democrats” in the polls, said Carroll.

“They use these polls on purpose to deflate the right and the conservati­ve movement, to get them to believe that no one’s voting for Trump” and to send the message ‘we can’t win, don’t even go to vote,’” he said. Trump recently said that a batch of emails posted by WikiLeaks shows John Podesta, the chairman of Clinton’s election campaign, had asked for a poll to be taken using an inflated number of Democrats in the sample.

A check of those emails turned up no evidence of this claim.

Anything that runs counter to Trump’s declaratio­ns is fodder for the conspiraci­sts, who see it as a manipulati­on of public opinion.

The fact that recent polls show Trump gaining ground is only a new polling tactic, according to Carroll.

After months of cooking the data, the pollsters “start telling the truth,” he said, “because they have to say: ‘we were right.’”—

 ?? AFP ?? a supporter cheers as donald Trump addresses a rally at the national western complex in denver, colorado. —
AFP a supporter cheers as donald Trump addresses a rally at the national western complex in denver, colorado. —

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