Los Angeles Times

Trump: ‘All of these liars will be sued’

A Gettysburg, Pa., speech combines pledges for executive action with threats against his accusers.

- By Noah Bierman noah.bierman @latimes.com

GETTYSBURG, Pa. — Donald Trump launched another late attempt to fix his sagging campaign Saturday, delivering a speech billed as a closing argument in a hotel ballroom near the battlefiel­d that turned the direction of the Civil War.

Yet, even as the GOP nominee for president praised Abraham Lincoln for uniting the country, Trump laced his Gettysburg speech with familiar charges of a rigged election and corrupt media, along with a new threat against the women who have accused him of sexual misconduct.

“All of these liars will be sued when the election is over,” Trump told a small audience at the Eisenhower Hotel.

Just a few hours later in California, yet another woman came forward to accuse Trump. Jessica Drake said he offered her $10,000 for sex after meeting her at a Lake Tahoe golf tournament 10 years ago. The Trump campaign called the allegation “false and ridiculous.”

Trump’s Gettysburg event epitomized his campaign’s twilight phase, with a speech in two parts that seemed at odds with each other.

It was at once a confident and forward-looking outline of a Trump administra­tion that would obliterate the Washington establishm­ent and return power to the people, as the candidate pledged more than two dozen bills and executive actions in his first 100 days in office.

Yet it was also a lament full of blame, indignatio­n and threats against the forces that Trump says are allied in an all-out effort to deny him the White House.

Intending to look presidenti­al, Trump spoke with a subdued voice from a teleprompt­er, in contrast to two free-wheeling rallies in Pennsylvan­ia on Friday.

Trump billed the speech as a policy address that would highlight his first actions as president. But almost all of the promises had been made before in other speeches and news releases.

They include steep tax reductions, a border wall with Mexico, a constituti­onal amendment limiting terms for members of Congress and the cancellati­on of billions of dollars in payments for United Nations climate change programs.

He added new details to a recent proposal to impose mandatory minimum criminal sentences for immigrants who return to the U.S. illegally after they have been deported and a promise to freeze most federal government hiring.

Trump had given a similar speech in June, during another low point in his campaign, laying out promises for his first 100 days in office. Among them: appointing conservati­ve judges, repealing and replacing President Obama’s healthcare law and lifting restrictio­ns on energy production.

Before ticking off the policy agenda, though, Trump plowed through the long list of his alleged enemies.

He again tried to define his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, as the choice of elites and establishm­ent figures who have no regard for the working class.

“Hillary Clinton is not running against me,” Trump said. “She’s running against change and she’s running against all of the American people and all of the American voters.”

Clinton, meanwhile, has increasing­ly been looking past the election in her stump speeches as she tries to reach out to Trump voters, many of whom are signaling they will not accept the results if he loses.

“I know there are a lot of people right here in Pennsylvan­ia who have a lot of questions,” she said at a rally in Pittsburgh. “They want to know how we’re going to move forward. They are upset by what they see happening around them. I get that, but anger is not a plan. We need to work together.”

Trump accused the media repeatedly last week of ignoring three recent national polls that show his campaign ahead of Clinton’s — including the Los Angeles Times poll that showed him leading by a fraction of a percentage point as of Saturday.

The majority of national polls, however, along with those from key battlegrou­nd states, show Trump facing a deepening deficit.

A top Trump campaign aide, however, conceded during a call with reporters Friday night that Clinton was leading, and accused her of running out the clock to avoid a stumble.

Trump has vacillated in recent days between bravado and tentative talk about confrontin­g the possibilit­y of a loss.

In three speeches Friday, he mentioned Britain’s vote in June to leave the European Union, known as “Brexit,” which defied prediction­s from many experts.

Trump alternatel­y described his campaign as “beyond Brexit,” “Brexit-plus,” and “Brexit times five.”

Many of his supporters are convinced he will win, agreeing that the news media is in cahoots with Clinton to shape coverage and manipulate polls to depress turnout among his voters.

“I hate seeing stuff about the polls,” said Jacqueline Catapano, 35, a nurse who attended a boisterous rally in Newtown, Pa., on Friday. “It’s a tactic from their side to get people to think we’re already defeated.”

A few minutes into a speech at the fairground­s in Fletcher, N.C., on Friday, Trump broke off from a riff about American workers and promised that he, too, would work harder.

He promised four daily campaign appearance­s, maybe just two on slow days, “right up until the actual vote on Nov. 8.”

Then Trump said something that seemed to bespeak a measure of humility. It was, after more than a year of nonstop hyperbole, almost as shocking as some of the bombast.

“And then, I don’t know what kind of shape I’m in, but I’ll be happy that at least I will have known, win, lose or draw — and I’m almost sure if the people come out, we’re going to win — but I will be happy with myself,” he said.

“Because I don’t want to say, I don’t want to think back, if only I did one more rally,” he added.

“I would have won North Carolina by 500 votes instead of losing it by 200 votes. I never want to ever look back.”

“What a waste of time,” he said a few minutes later, “if we don’t pull this off.”

 ?? M. Baker For The Times ?? JESSICA DRAKE, right, with attorney Gloria Allred, says Trump offered her $10,000 for sex, a claim his campaign called “ridiculous.”
M. Baker For The Times JESSICA DRAKE, right, with attorney Gloria Allred, says Trump offered her $10,000 for sex, a claim his campaign called “ridiculous.”

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