Donald Trump has claimed that there is a possibility
of the US presidential election being “rigged” as he tried to divert attention
away from a disastrous week for his campaign by also labelling his rival Hillary
Clinton as “the devil” and praising the primary opponent of
Republican speaker Paul Ryan.
The Republican nominee has in the past few days faced
a barrage of criticism following his controversial comments about the Gold Star
parents of a Muslim soldier killed in Iraq.
In response to an emotional
attack on him by the parents of 27-year-old army captain Humayun Khan,
who died in a suicide bombing, Trump had claimed to have made sacrifices equal
to their son.
A range of figures and organizations from across the
political spectrum from John McCain to Barack Obama to
the Veterans of Foreign Wars have criticized him for his comments.
But at rallies on Monday Trump declined to address
that controversy and, in moments typical of his campaign so far, decided to
ignite others.
At a campaign town hall in Columbus, Ohio, Trump said
he feared that the election would be “rigged,” in an unprecedented statement
for a major party nominee in modern history.
“I’m afraid the election is going to be rigged, I have
to be honest,” he told the crowd.
He did not elaborate but later repeated the charge on
Monday night with Sean Hannity on Fox News, saying: “November 8th, we’d better
be careful, because that election is going to be rigged. And I hope the Republicans are
watching closely or it’s going to be taken away from us.”
Roger Stone, a long time confidante of Trump,
amplified these concerns in an interview with a far right wing radio show.
Stone said: “I think we have widespread voter fraud,
but the first thing that Trump needs to do is begin talking about it
constantly.”
Laying out a strategy for Trump to adopt, Stone added:
“He needs to say for example, today would be a perfect example: ‘I am leading
in Florida. The polls all show it. If I lose Florida, we will know that there’s
voter fraud. If there’s voter fraud, this election will be illegitimate, the
election of the winner will be illegitimate, we will have a constitutional
crisis, widespread civil disobedience, and the government will no longer be the
government.’”
He also promised a “bloodbath” if the Democrats
attempted to “steal” the election.
On Monday night, Trump also escalated his rhetoric
about Democratic rival Clinton. In a packed rally in a high school gym in
Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania,
he called the former secretary of state “the devil”.
The statement came after Trump reiterated a frequent
allegation of his on the campaign trail in recent days, that in endorsing the
former secretary of state, Bernie Sanders made a deal with the devil. He went
further this time, explicitly saying: “She’s the devil.”
In his hour-long speech to a cheering crowd of
thousands, Trump hit a number of familiar notes. The Republican nominee made exaggerated
claims about his poll numbers while railing against free trade agreements and
criticizing Nato members for not “paying up”.
He also reiterated his praise for waterboarding to
cheers. Trump complained of Isis: “They can chop off heads, they can drown
people, they can bury you in sand and we can’t waterboard.” In the opinion of
the Republican presidential nominee, “we’re not playing on a level playing
field”.
The two new controversies ignited by Trump were the
typical modus operandi of the Republican nominee when he is under attack.
Instead of apologizing or backtracking, he has long thrown out a kaleidoscope
of allegations in order to shift the news cycle to stories less damaging to
him.
In the same vein, Trump surprisingly tweeted
praise for Paul Nehlen, the long shot primary opponent of
speaker Paul Ryan, who was running a campaign similar to Trump’s focused on
trade and immigration.
The tweet marks a clear rebuke to Ryan, who, while
endorsing Trump, has long been critical of the Republican nominee’s more
extreme rhetoric as well as his support for a ban on Muslims.
Although Ryan put out a
statement praising the Khan family on Sunday, he did not
mention Trump. When asked for comment, Zack Roday, a spokesman for Ryan’s
re-election campaign, said: “Rather than engage in a back-and-forth, the
Speaker is going to remain focused entirely on ensuring we deliver strong
Republican majorities this fall.”
Adding to an already febrile day in the Trump camp, it
was announced he had also fired Ed Brookover, a senior aide who had formerly
worked for Ben Carson’s presidential campaign.
A veteran operative, Brookover had served as the
campaign’s liaison to the Republican National Committee after previously
helping coordinate Trump’s delegate operations. Brookover is one several top
campaign staffers to leave Trump’s campaign since he effectively clinched the
Republican nomination, a list that includes former campaign manager Corey
Lewandowski.
The Republican nominee was also
quoted in an interview with USA Today saying that if his
daughter Ivanka was sexually harassed, “I would like to think she would find
another career or find another company if that was the case.”
Trump announced Monday that he had raised $35m in
July, which he claimed was “unheard of for Republicans”.
Campaigns are not due to file reports to the Federal
Election Commission until 20 August. However, if accurate, that figure would
represent a decrease of
$66m on the total raised by Mitt Romney in July 2012.
Source: thegurdian
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