Donald Trump has always had a penchant for outsize rhetoric. But as the 2024 presidential campaign enters its final weeks, observers have detected a dark turn, and Trump seems to agree.
One recent speech in Wisconsin had Trump suggesting he was breaking new ground, said Business Insider. Immigrants "walk into your kitchen, they'll cut your throat," he said to attendees. "I'm just saying, this is a dark, this a dark speech."
Trump believes it's Democrats who have the rhetoric problem. "Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at," Trump said to Fox News, when the problem is that "they are the ones that are destroying the country." 'More incendiary, not less' Trump's speeches are "becoming more incendiary, not less," Paul Waldman said at MSNBC. Take, for example, recent comments on crime at a Pennsylvania rally. "One really violent day" of police retaliation would solve the problem, said Trump. "One rough hour, and I mean real rough, the word will get out, and it will end immediately."
The former president has also told crowds that a Harris election would result in World War III. That suggests Trump has decided that "fear and hate" are political winners, said Waldman, and that the only flaw in his messaging is to be "too restrained in fomenting both."
Trump's allies are pushing back against this criticism, said The Daily Wire. "The problems with the world are not Trump's rhetoric. They call him crazy," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said to Jake Tapper on CNN. The media rarely focuses on the rhetoric used by Trump's critics, said Graham.
A pitch to 'irregular voters' "Insults, threats and lies" have always been part of Trump's political arsenal, said NPR. But his recent verbiage is notable now that early voting has started in Pennsylvania. Trump could choose to soften his language in an attempt to reach persuadable voters. Instead, he has "chosen to maintain his harsh rhetoric."
Trump's "increasingly dark rhetoric" could move undecided voters into his column, Jonah Goldberg said at the Los Angeles Times. Yes, Trump's commentary "probably turns off most persuadable voters." But it could prove compelling to "irregular voters" — those folks who typically need an extra push to go to the polls. Policy differences "aren't going to motivate" that group, said Goldberg. But "being told America's very existence depends on it might." |