Trump blames Biden and Harris' rhetoric toward him despite his own
history of going after rivals
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[September 17, 2024]
By MICHELLE L. PRICE and WILL WEISSERT
NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump claimed without evidence Monday that
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris' comments that he
is a threat to democracy had inspired the latest apparent attempt on his
life, despite his own long history of inflammatory campaign rhetoric and
advocacy for jailing or prosecuting his political enemies.
With the election now just 50 days away and early ballots already being
mailed out in some places, this year’s presidential campaign was among
the most turbulent in American history even before Sunday’s apparent
assassination attempt. Trump was safe after the incident in Florida and
praised the Secret Service for protecting him but didn't shy away from
blaming his opponents.
“Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is
going to save the country and they are the ones that are destroying the
country — both from the inside and out,” Trump said in comments to Fox
News Digital.
The Republican former president's statements are a sharp departure from
how he reacted after an assassination attempt in July during a rally in
Butler, Pennsylvania, in which a bullet grazed his ear.
Then, Trump called for national unity, saying in a social media post
that “it is more important than ever that we stand United.” A few days
later, though, the former president returned to sharply criticizing
Democrats and relishing the political bombast.
While authorities continue to investigate the motives of both the gunman
in Pennsylvania and the person arrested Sunday in Florida, Trump has
made clear that he sees attempts on his life as politically motivated —
and blames his rivals for them.
That's despite Trump himself drawing repeated criticism for his
rhetoric. He has talked about prosecuting his political rivals and
alleged without evidence that Democrats have brought the felony cases
against him for political reasons.
His comments blaming Democrats' rhetoric were echoed Monday by his
running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, and conservative activist Ralph Reed
at the Georgia Faith & Freedom Victory Dinner, where Vance argued that
Democrats cannot call Trump a “threat to democracy” and “a fascist” and
expect that violence would not follow. Trump has also used those phrases
to assail Democrats.
In a post on his social media site on Monday, Trump again claimed that
he had been the target of politically motivated attacks, writing that
the left “has taken politics in our Country to a whole new level of
Hatred, Abuse, and Distrust.” He said “it will only get worse” and then
veered into comments about immigration, even though there is no evidence
the person arrested in connection with the apparent assassination
attempt was an immigrant.
That follows the former president during last week's debate and in the
days after it amplifying false rumors that Haitian immigrants in Ohio
are abducting and eating pets. The community days later evacuated
schools and government buildings amid bomb threats, adding to the sense
of an especially unstable and tense moment in America even before
Sunday’s stunning development.
Biden, by contrast, sought to steer clear of politics. He decried the
apparent assassination attempt and said Monday that America must work to
stop the scourge of political violence.
“America has suffered too many times the tragedy of an assassin’s
bullet,” Biden said at the start of an address to the National HBCU Week
Conference in Philadelphia. “It solves nothing. It just tears the
country apart. We must do everything we can to prevent it and never give
it any oxygen.”
Biden in his speech added that Ronald Rowe, the acting director of the
Secret Service, was in Florida “assessing what happened and determining
whether any further adjustments need to be made to ensure” Trump’s
safety. The president later spoke with Trump on the phone and conveyed
his relief that the former president was safe, according to the White
House, which described it as a cordial conversation.
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Police patrol on a bridge beside the Mar-a-Lago estate of Republican
presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump, as a
supporter flies flags to express support for Trump one day after an
apparent assassination attempt, in Palm Beach, Fla., Monday, Sept.
16, 2024. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
Trump, in an evening appearance on X, said Biden "couldn't have been
nicer" during a Monday conversation his campaign described as being
about Secret Service protection.
After Trump's shooting in Pennsylvania, Biden initially called on the
nation to lower the political temperature, though he, too, eventually
pivoted back to criticizing Trump as a threat to the nation's founding
principles.
Rice University historian Douglas Brinkley said Sunday's “deeply
troublesome” event coming on top of an already dramatic year with an
election looming has created “a kind of uncertainty across the land.”
Brinkley said: “2024 has just unspooled in a chaotic and frightful
fashion. It’s impossible for anybody to get footing in their daily lives
with a news cycle that is so constantly grim and absurd.”
Trump had already been scheduled to spend Monday at his Mar-a-Lago home
in Florida, according to a person familiar with his schedule. He was
expected return to the campaign trail on Tuesday for a town hall in
Flint, Michigan, and has appearances later in the week in New York,
Washington and North Carolina.
Harris, meanwhile, met with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters
at the 1.3 million-member group’s headquarters in Washington. She's
looking to lock up yet another labor union’s endorsement, but it wasn't
immediately forthcoming.
The vice president was scheduled Tuesday to campaign in swing-state
Pennsylvania and planned later in the week to speak in Washington,
Michigan and Wisconsin.
Their returns to the campaign trail are likely to be overshadowed by
questions about the armed man engaged by Secret Service agents at the
former president’s Florida golf course. The FBI was leading the
investigation and working to determine any motive.
Beyond the first attempt on Trump’s life when he was grazed by a bullet
at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, the campaign was whipsawed over the
past six months by Trump’s historic criminal trial and conviction; the
crisis and eventual end of Biden’s reelection campaign after his
floundering debate performance; and Harris taking his place,
fundamentally shifting the race.
In August, Trump’s campaign disclosed it had been hacked and said
Iranian actors had stolen and distributed sensitive internal documents.
The Justice Department is preparing criminal charges in connection with
the hack.
Republican strategist David Urban, a Trump ally, said it was too soon to
know how Sunday's close call might affect the days and weeks ahead in
the campaign, but in his conversations with those in Trump’s orbit, he
was picking up a deep sense of shock and uncertainty.
“We’ve said unprecedented so many times this year," Urban said. “I don’t
know if we can even say the word anymore.”
___
Weissert reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Ayanna
Alexander in Philadelphia, Darlene Superville and Aamer Madhani in
Washington, Steve Peoples in New York, Bill Barrow in Atlanta, and
Adriana Gomez Licon in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., contributed to this
report.
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