Trump
sparks outrage after calling for army to handle enemies on election day
Democrats
condemn ex-president for saying armed forces should turn against ‘enemy within’
when voters go to polls
Robert Tait
in Washington DC
Mon 14 Oct
2024 19.11 BST
Donald Trump
has provoked an angry backlash from Democrats after calling for the US armed
forces to be turned against his political adversaries when voters go to the
polls at next month’s presidential election.
In comments
that added further fuel to fears of an authoritarian crackdown if he recaptures
the White House, the Republican nominee said the military or national guard
should be deployed against opponents that he called “the enemy within” when the
election takes place on 5 November.
He singled
out the California congressman, Adam Schiff, who was the lead prosecutor in the
ex-president’s first impeachment trial, as posing a bigger threat to a free and
fair election than foreign terrorists or illegal immigrants, his usual prime
target for abuse.
Trump’s
comments, to Fox News in response to a question on possible election “chaos”,
triggered an angry reaction from Kamala Harris’s campaign, which likened them
to previous remarks that he would be a dictator “on day one” of a second
presidency and his suggestions that the US constitution should be terminated to
overturn the 2020 election result, which he falsely claims was stolen by Joe
Biden.
Trump and
the vice-president are locked in a tight contest as election day looms. Most
national polls put Harris narrowly ahead, but in the crucial swing states which
will decide the election, the contest appears much tighter and offers Trump
numerous paths to a potential victory.
After
initially saying election chaos would not come from his side, Trump launched a
vituperative attack on his opponents when the interviewer, Maria Bartiromo,
raised the possibility of outside agitators or immigrants who had committed
crimes.
“I think the
bigger problem are the people from within. We have some very bad people. We
have some sick people,” he said on Fox’s Sunday Morning Futures programme.
“It should
be very easily handled by, if necessary, by the national guard, or if really
necessary, by the military, because they can’t let that happen.”
At a rally
in Pennsylvania on Monday night, Harris slammed Donald Trump for his comments
and showed a clip of the former president making the remarks.
“A second
Trump term would be a huge risk for America, and dangerous. Donald Trump is
increasingly unstable and unhinged,” Harris told the crowd after playing the
clip.
Ruth
Ben-Ghiat, a historian and expert on fascism at New York University, told NBC
that Trump was flagging up what he planned to do as president, which she
compared to the “‘strongman’ ruling templates of Viktor Orbán, Narendra Modi
and Vladimir Putin, the leaders of Hungary, India and Russia respectively.
“He’s
actually rehearsing, in a sense, what he would be doing as head of state, which
is what Orbán does, Modi is doing, Putin has long done,” she said.
Trump turned
his fire on Schiff, who is a candidate for the US Senate in next month’s poll.
He said: “The thing that’s tougher to handle are these lunatics that we have
inside, like Adam Schiff.”
It was his
second attack in two days on Schiff, who earned Trump’s enmity when he was the
ranking Democrat on the House of Representatives’ intelligence committee during
his presidency, when he said there was evidence of collusion between Trump and
Russia during the 2016 election. The House later voted, under Republican
leadership, to censure Schiff over his comments.
At a rally
in Coachella, California – a state he has virtually no chance of winning – on
Saturday, Trump mocked Schiff’s physical characteristics and labelled him a
bigger threat than foreign adversaries, including the Chinese president Xi
Jinping.
“He [Xi] is
somebody that we can handle,” Trump said. “The worst people are the enemies
from within, the sleaze bags, the guy that you’re going to elect to the Senate,
shifty Adam Schiff. He’s a major low-life.”
He claimed,
without providing evidence, that Schiff was engaged in mass voter fraud. “They
send millions and million of ballots all over the place,” he said. “[In]
California, you don’t have anything like a voting booth. They take ballots and
they just send them all over the place. They come back and they say, oh,
somebody won by 5m votes.”
Schiff
responded on Twitter/X by accusing Trump of inciting violence in the same
manner as he was widely accused of doing on 6 January 2021, when a mob attacked
the US Capitol in an effort to stop certification of Biden’s election win.
“Today,
Trump threatened to deploy the military against the ‘enemies from within.’ The
same thing he has called me,” Schiff wrote.
“Just as he
incited a mob to attack the Capitol, he again stokes violence against those who
oppose him.”
Harris’s
campaign issued a more extensive condemnation. “Donald Trump is suggesting that
his fellow Americans are worse ‘enemies’ than foreign adversaries, and he is
saying he would use the military against them,” campaign spokesperson Ian Sams
said.
“Taken with
his vow to be a dictator on ‘day one’, calls for the ‘termination’ of the
constitution, and plans to surround himself with sycophants who will give him
unchecked, unprecedented power if he returns to office, this should alarm every
American who cares about their freedom and security.
“What Donald
Trump is promising is dangerous, and returning him to office is simply a risk
Americans cannot afford.”
While Trump,
being out of power, will be in no position to deploy troops on election day,
his call for military power to quell political opposition is familiar,
recalling his demand that soldiers be deployed in the streets of Washington DC
in 2020 to disperse thousands of demonstrators protesting the death of George
Floyd.
Gen Mark
Milley, the then chairperson of the joint chiefs of staff, reportedly came
close to resigning over the demand.
Milley, who
has since fallen foul of Trump, is quoted in a new book by Bob Woodward – the
journalist who, along with Carl Bernstein, helped to expose the Watergate
scandal of the 1970s – as calling the ex-president “a total fascist” and has
voiced fears that he could be recalled to service and court-martialled if he
returns to office.
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