Gretchen Whitmer: Trump 'inciting domestic
terrorism' with 'Lock her up!' rally chant
Michigan
governor was subject of foiled rightwing kidnap plot
President
attacks Democrat at rally in battleground state
Martin
Pengelly in New York and agencies
@MartinPengelly
Sun 18 Oct
2020 16.31 BST
Gretchen
Whitmer, the governor of Michigan who was the subject of a rightwing plot to
kidnap and possibly kill her over coronavirus lockdown measures, has accused
Donald Trump of “inspiring and incentivising domestic terrorism”.
Whitmer
spoke after Lara Trump, a campaign surrogate for her father-in-law, insisted
the president was merely “having fun” when he attacked Whitmer and responded to
chants of “Lock her up!” at a rally in Muskegon.
“Lock ’em
all up,” the president said.
On Sunday,
on NBC’s Meet the Press, Whitmer was asked about the coronavirus situation in
her state and Trump’s encouragement of the chants against her.
“It’s
incredibly disturbing,” she said, “that the president of the United States, 10
days after a plot to kidnap me, put me on trial and execute me was uncovered,
the president is at it again and inspiring and incentivising and inciting this
kind of domestic terrorism.
“It is
wrong. It’s got to end. It is dangerous not just for me and my family, but for
public servants everywhere who are doing their jobs and trying to protect their
fellow Americans. People of goodwill on both sides of the aisle need to step up
and call this out and bring the heat down.
It is dangerous not just for me and my family, but for
public servants everywhere
Gretchen Whitmer
“This is
the United States of America. We do not tolerate actions like he has given
comfort to and that’s why we all have to be in this together.”
In
Muskegon, Trump targeted Whitmer several times, criticising state rules on the
coronavirus, calling the governor “dishonest” and making light of the plot that
was foiled by the FBI.
Thirteen
men have been charged in connection with the plot, which included plans to
storm the state capitol and hold some kind of trial. Trump took credit for
federal law enforcement’s role in foiling the plot.
“They said
she was threatened,” he said. “And she blamed me. Hopefully you’ll be sending
her packing pretty soon.”
The chant
of “Lock her up!” was a reprise of chants Trump supporters aimed at Hillary
Clinton throughout the 2016 campaign.
Whitmer’s
digital director, Tori Saylor, responded on Twitter, writing: “Every single
time the president does this at a rally, the violent rhetoric towards her
immediately escalates on social media. It has to stop. It just has to.”
Lee
Chatfield, the Republican speaker of the Michigan house, wrote: “Trump didn’t
chant ‘lock her up’ about our governor. But others did and it was wrong. She
was literally just targeted. Let’s debate differences. Let’s win elections. But
not that.”
But Lara
Trump told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday the president “wasn’t doing
anything I don’t think to provoke people to threaten this woman at all. He was
having fun at a Trump rally and quite frankly, there are bigger issues than
this right now for everyday Americans people … he wasn’t encouraging people to
threaten this woman, that’s ridiculous.”
The
president’s daughter-in-law also said: “Well gosh I would like to show people
my social media and the threats against me, the threats against my children.”
Michigan
added 1,791 new Covid-19 cases on Saturday, bringing its seven-day total past
10,000, a record. Wisconsin, where Trump campaigned later, reported 3,861 new
cases on Friday, also a record. Trump slammed anti-coronavirus measures.
“You got to
get your governor to open your state and get your schools open,” he said in
Muskegon. “The schools have to be open, right?”
More than 8
million people have been infected in the US and nearly 220,000 have died. Joe
Biden continues to hammer Trump for his response.
“All
President Trump is offering the people of Michigan is more lies and
distractions,” the Democratic nominee said. “No plan to get the virus under
control, no strategy for pulling our economy out of this recession, no vision
for uniting the country.”
Trump told
both his rallies Biden would “shut down the country, delay the vaccine and
prolong the pandemic”, and insisted the country was turning the corner.
Michigan
and Wisconsin are key battleground states in the fight for the electoral
college. Trump won both as he took the presidency despite losing the national
popular vote to Clinton by nearly 3m ballots. He is behind in both
states this year.


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