Trump calls on supporters to 'guard the vote' in Democratic-run US
cities
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[December 04, 2023]
By Nathan Layne
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Reuters) -Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the
Republican presidential nomination, told his supporters on Saturday to
"go into" Philadelphia and two other Democratic-run cities to "guard the
vote" in 2024, repeating his unfounded claims of widespread election
fraud in 2020 as justification for the call to action.
Speaking at two events in Iowa, Trump also sought to counter growing
concern among Democrats and some Republicans that his potential return
to the White House posed a threat to democracy.
Even as he faces criminal charges over his efforts to reverse his 2020
loss, Trump attempted to flip the script and paint the winner, President
Joe Biden, as a dangerous autocrat, calling him a communist, fascist and
a tyrant.
A spokesperson for Biden's re-election campaign said Trump's comments
portraying Biden as a threat to democracy were an attempt to divert the
public's attention from his own problems.
Looking ahead to next year's general election, Trump said it was
important to scrutinize the vote in the battleground states likely to
determine the outcome. He singled out the biggest cities in Michigan,
Pennsylvania and Georgia - all Democratic strongholds at the center of
the blizzard of false voter fraud claims made by Trump and his allies
three years ago.
"So the most important part of what's coming up is to guard the vote.
And you should go into Detroit and you should go into Philadelphia and
you should go into some of these places, Atlanta," Trump said in Ankeny,
a suburb of Des Moines.
Trump's comments foreshadow what is likely to be a contentious election
in November 2024. Despite the failure of dozens of lawsuits filed by
Trump and his allies challenging the 2020 outcome, Trump continues to
claim, without evidence, that he lost to President Joe Biden due to
fraud.
Trump did not specify who he was asking to "go into" the
battleground-state cities. A campaign aide, when asked to clarify, said
he was referring to poll-watchers and volunteers whose objective would
be to ensure a secure election.
That would mesh with plans outlined by the Republican National
Committee, which is aiming to recruit and train tens of thousands of
poll workers and watchers in states that are hotly contested because
their voting preferences could swing either to Republicans or Democrats.
'VOLATILE PERIOD' FOR DEMOCRACY
The comments by Trump, president from 2017 to 2021, come amid growing
scrutiny over his recent rhetoric on the campaign trail, which has
included referring to his political enemies as "vermin," a word some
historians said echoed the language of Nazi Germany.
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Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald
Trump rallies with supporters at a "commit to caucus" event at a
Whiskey bar in Ankeny, Iowa, U.S. December 2, 2023. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria
Timothy Naftali, a senior research scholar at Columbia University's
School of International and Public Affairs, said Trump's comments
calling for scrutiny of elections in large Democratic-controlled
cities were concerning because he made them while seeking to
undermine trust in U.S. elections.
"We are in a very volatile period in our democracy," Naftali said.
"If he is seeking to increase trust in our system, he should be more
explicit. But what he said today was in the context of his mistrust
of our system."
In recent weeks Biden's re-election campaign has more aggressively
gone after Trump, highlighting his mounting legal troubles and
likely policies it argues would hurt the economy and damage the
foundations of democracy. Trump, for instance, has vowed to use his
power to imprison his political enemies.
"Donald Trump’s America in 2025 is one where the government is his
personal weapon to lock up his political enemies,” campaign
spokesman Ammar Moussa said in response to Trump's Iowa remarks.
"After spending a week defending his plan to rip health care away
from millions of Americans, this is his latest desperate attempt at
distraction — the American people see right through it and it won’t
work.”
Trump is facing four criminal trials, including two accusing him of
seeking to subvert the 2020 election, helped by a mob of his
supporters who ransacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
At an event in Cedar Rapids, Trump's campaign passed out signs
reading 'BIDEN ATTACKS DEMOCRACY'. During his speech Trump repeated
his unsubstantiated claim that Biden was using the Justice
Department to go after him, among other alleged transgressions
making Biden the threat to democracy.
"Joe Biden wants to make this race a question of which candidate
will defend our democracy and protect our freedoms," Trump said.
"This campaign is a righteous crusade to liberate our republic from
Biden and the criminals."
Also on Saturday, Trump doubled down on comments made a few days
earlier indicating he wanted to make significant changes to the
Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, calling the healthcare
insurance program used by millions of Americans "a disaster." He did
not provide specifics.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Gram Slattery
in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis and William Mallard)
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