Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump resumes in-person campaignin­g after a weekend leveling treason claims

- By Jill Colvin

SUMMERVILL­E, S.C. — Former President Donald Trump stopped by a gun shop and toured a boat building facility in South Carolina on Monday, ramping up his in-person campaign after a weekend online threatenin­g the media, making multiple accusation­s of treason and urging congressio­nal Republican­s to go ahead and shut down the government.

He also claimed he could design a better fighter jet than the military.

The Republican presidenti­al front-runner, who has spent far less time on the campaign trail than his leading rivals, began his trip to small- town Summervill­e with a meet-and-greet with volunteers at a local campaign office and a visit to a local gun store, where he admired a Glock handgun and posed for photos.

Spokesman Steven Cheung posted that the former president, who is currently under federal indictment, had purchased the weapon during his visit to Palmetto State Armory, but later deleted the post on the social media site X, formerly Twitter, and clarified that Mr. Trump, “says he wants to buy one.”

Federal law prohibits the sale of guns to people under felony indictment and bars them from receiving a gun “which has been shipped or transporte­d in interstate or foreign commerce.” However, after a 2022 Supreme Court decision that created new standards for firearm restrictio­ns, some judges have declared the measure unconstitu­tional. A federal appeals court is currently considerin­g a challenge to the law.

Mr. Trump later rallied supporters outside a boat manufactur­ing facility in the blazing sun, where he vowed to overturn a proposed Biden administra­tion rule that would lower the speed limit for boats along the East Coast in an effort to prevent collisions with North Atlantic right whales. The area was surrounded by power boats.

He also showed off new South Carolina endorsemen­ts, including from the state’s attorney general, its secretary of state, its House majority leader and other members of the South Carolina House of Representa­tives.

While his rivals have been busy holding town halls and visiting local diners, Mr. Trump has spent much of the last months responding to his mounting legal troubles. He has been indicted four times in four jurisdicti­ons and faces 91 criminal charges, but that has yet to hurt his standing in the GOP primary.

In a sign of his dominance, he’s going to skip the second Republican primary debate on Wednesday, as he did the first, and will instead visit Michigan to voice his opposition to President Joe Biden’s automotive policies amid an auto workers strike.

Mr. Trump, who has vowed retributio­n if he wins a second term, spent the weekend lashing out at the media and others on his Truth Social platform. Among his targets: NBC News and MSNBC, which he claimed “should be investigat­ed

for its ‘ Country Threatenin­g Treason.’ ” He once again slammed the free press — a cornerston­e of U.S. democracy — as its “true threat,” while warning “The Fake News Media should pay a big price for what they have done to our once great Country!’”

Mr. Trump often casts unflatteri­ng coverage and stories he doesn’t like as ”fake.”

Beyond his complaints with the press, Mr. Trump lashed out at Gen. Mark Milley, the retiring chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, over phone calls he made to China in the final stormy months of Mr. Trump’s presidency. Gen. Milley has defended those calls as “routine” and “perfectly within the duties and responsibi­lities” of his job.

But Mr. Trump on Friday claimed Gen. Milley had committed “an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH! A war between China and the United States could have been the result of this treasonous act.” He said Gen. Milley’s retirement ”will be a time for all citizens of the USA to celebrate!”

Mr. Trump also laced into congressio­nal leaders as he pressed Republican­s to embrace a looming government

shutdown — “UNLESS YOU GET EVERYTHING, SHUT IT DOWN!” he urged — and again called for the ouster of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, “the weakest, dumbest, and most conflicted ‘Leader’ in U.S. Senate history.”

Mr. Trump was just as displeased with McConnell’s Democratic counterpar­ts. “EVERY DEMOCRAT SHOULD RESIGN FROM THE SENATE!” he said, in the wake of a sweeping bribery indictment against New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez.

He also claimed, after the recent crash of an F-35B Joint Strike Fighter aircraft in South Carolina, that as president he had told the the U.S. Air Force and Lockheed

Martin numerous times that the F-35 Fighter Jet was “in effect, DEFECTIVE, because it only has one engine” — and that he also advised Boeing against developing the 737 MAX before a pair of crashes.

He insulted his U.N. Ambassador and current GOP rival Nikki Haley, a native of South Carolina, calling her “Birdbrain.” And he took the time to criticize shock jock Howard Stern, calling him “a broken weirdo, unattracti­ve both inside and out, trying like hell to be relevant!”

Mr. Trump last visited the state last month, when he spoke at the state GOP’s largest annual fundraiser in Columbia.

 ?? Charlie Neibergall/Associated Press ?? Republican presidenti­al front-runner Donald Trump speaks Wednesday during a rally in Dubuque, Iowa. He campaigned in South Carolina on Monday.
Charlie Neibergall/Associated Press Republican presidenti­al front-runner Donald Trump speaks Wednesday during a rally in Dubuque, Iowa. He campaigned in South Carolina on Monday.

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