Unbowed, Trump intensifies attacks on four Democratic congresswomen
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[July 18, 2019]
By Jeff Mason and Steve Holland
GREENVILLE, N.C./WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
President Donald Trump stepped up his vilification of four liberal
lawmakers as un-American at a raucous rally on Wednesday, underscoring
that the attacks will form a key part of his strategy for winning
re-election in 2020.
Despite criticism from Democrats that his comments about the four
minority congresswomen are racist, Trump went on an extended diatribe
about the lawmakers, saying they were welcome to leave the country if
they did not like his policies on issues such as immigration and
defending Israel.
"So these Congresswomen, their comments are helping to fuel the rise of
a dangerous, militant hard left," the Republican president said to roars
from the crowd in North Carolina, a state seen as key to his
re-election.
Trump tweeted over the weekend that the four progressive
representatives, known as "the squad" - Ilhan Omar of Minnesota,
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and
Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts - should "go back" where they came
from, even though all are U.S. citizens and three are U.S.-born.
The aim, one source close to Trump said, was to make Democrats look as
far left as possible to moderate voters as he girds for a tough
re-election battle in November 2020.
"He is trying to make them the face of the Democratic Party as we move
closer into the 2020 cycle and he’s trying to highlight them as a fringe
crowd as much as possible so it turns off your middle-of-the-road
voters," the source said.
As Trump recounted past comments by Omar, who was born in Somalia and
emigrated to the United States as a child, the crowd began chanting:
"Send her back!"
"Tonight I have a suggestion for the hate-filled extremists who are
constantly trying to tear our country down. They never have anything
good to say. That's why I say: 'Hey, if they don't like it, let them
leave. Let them leave,'" Trump said.
Trump spent about a fifth of his freewheeling 90-minute-long speech
criticizing the four lawmakers, to enthusiastic crowd response.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, the front-runner for the Democratic
2020 presidential nomination, weighed in against Trump's remarks via
Twitter.
"These members of Congress — children of immigrants, just like so many
of us — are an example of exactly what makes America great," Biden said
on the social network.
Trump also derided Biden in his remarks and skewered other Democrats
vying to be the party's 2020 candidate.
He repeated his frequent reference to U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren as
"Pocahontas," a dig about a controversy over her heritage that Warren
and Native American groups have complained is racist.
WINNING TACTIC?
Trump's Twitter attacks initially caused some heartburn for advisers who
felt he had gone too far.
But two said Trump had since offered a contrasting view, that the
political views of the four lawmakers were socialist, out of the
mainstream and hateful to their home country, versus those of the
president and his flag-waving rhetoric.
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President Donald Trump speaks about U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar,
and the crowd responded with "send her back", at a "Keep America
Great" campaign rally in Greenville, North Carolina, U.S., July 17,
2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
"If the American people have to choose between the squad and the
president, then that's an easy decision," one adviser said.
Trump, who during his 2016 campaign voiced harsh assessments of the
state of the country, tweeted a video ahead of the rally that
featured patriotic scenes of the president meeting Americans, with
frequent images of the American flag. It ended with the slogan:
"America - One Squad Under God."
"Democrats are now the party of high taxes, high crime, open
borders, late-term abortion, intolerance and division. The
Republican Party is the party for all Americans and American
values," he said in North Carolina.
The tactic follows a well-worn path for Trump, who called for a ban
on Muslims entering the United States during his 2016 campaign. His
proposal drew widespread criticism, but Republicans overwhelmingly
supported it, and it was a factor in his victory.
Over the weekend, Trump inserted himself into what had been an
internecine Democratic Party fight pitting Omar, Ocasio-Cortez,
Tlaib and Pressley against House of Representatives Speaker Nancy
Pelosi.
He first defended Pelosi, then attacked the four. That prompted
Pelosi to defend her flock, prompting Trump and other Republicans to
argue the Democratic Party had shifted to the left.
The Democratic-controlled House voted on Tuesday largely along party
lines to formally condemn Trump's remarks as "racist."
Trump's attacks had a spur-of-the-moment quality around which the
Republican Party later built a strategy.
The tactic had worked, said Barry Bennett, who advised Trump's 2016
campaign. "The Democratic Party last week was trying to distance
itself from the squad, and this week they’re hugging them, and that
is a massive win for Trump."
But not all Republicans were comfortable.
"I'm disappointed in the tweets," said Steve Duprey, a member of the
Republican National Committee from New Hampshire.
"I know the president is subject to lots of attacks, but he should
always try to turn the other cheek and take the high road," Duprey
said.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason in Greenville, North Carolina and and Steve
Holland in Washington; Additional reporting by Eric Beech, Roberta
Rampton and Makini Brice; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter
Cooney)
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