Donald Trump escalated his rhetoric against the media and against pollsters on Monday, alleging that both were part of a “rigged system” trying to undermine his candidacy.
Speaking in a rally in St Augustine, Florida, Trump falsely claimed
that hacked emails of John Podesta showed that the Clinton campaign
chair was “rigging the polls by oversampling Democrats”.
The Republican nominee, whose campaign is managed by pollster
Kellyanne Conway, called this “a voter suppression technique”.
Oversampling is a method used by pollsters to get better measurements of
specific sub-groups and is entirely normal in polling.
The statement followed a tweet from the Republican on Monday morning in which he claimed: “Major story that the Dems are making up phony polls in order to suppress the the Trump [sic]. We are going to WIN!” Almost every independent poll
has consistently shown a steady lead for Clinton since late July and
Conway has repeatedly conceded in recent days that Trump is behind.
Trump also escalated his attacks on media. He said the press, which
he described as being composed of “thieves and crooks”, may be even more
corrupt than the rival whom he has repeatedly derided as “Crooked
Hillary”.
The Ivy League-educated Trump, who lives in an ornate penthouse on
Fifth Avenue in New York, also slammed journalists as being out of touch
with working Americans, saying: “The media is entitled, condescending
and even contemptuous of people who don’t share their elitist views.” He
warned vaguely of those who “rig the media” and said: “They can wield
absolute power over your life, your economy, and your country.”
In addition, Trump complained at his rally, which was broadcast live
on cable news: “Sometimes I’ll have these great events and it isn’t
covered.”
His comments came on the same day that Trump launched his own media
enterprise. For the next two weeks, the campaign will be producing its
own live news program at 6.30pm every night.
The broadcast’s premiere on Monday night featured a ticker of
pro-Trump news, commercial breaks with pro-Trump ads and interviews with
campaign manager Kellyanne Conway and RNC top strategist Sean Spicer.
The show began as rumors grow of the Republican nominee potentially
starting “Trump TV” if he falls short of the White House in November.
Trump also returned to his patented rhetoric about jobs and trade. He continued to reiterate themes
from what was billed as a “contract with the American voter”, unveiled
in a speech in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, on Saturday, while adding in
Trumpian flourishes like his statement in a Tampa rally on Monday night
that “we’re losing our jobs like a bunch of babies”.
However, he did defend himself from accusations of close ties to
Russia by insisting: “I have nothing to do with Russia folks, I’ll give
you a written statement.”
Trump has long spoken warmly of Vladimir Putin and a number of his current and former staffers have had business ties
with Russia. In addition, Trump himself has repeatedly sought Russian
investment in his real estate projects. The Republican nominee’s son
Donald Trump Jr even bragged
in 2008: “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a
lot of our assets. We see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.”
Also on Monday, Trump once again made an appeal to minority voters to support him. The Republican nominee, who has repeatedly compared inner cities to war zones
and suggested African Americans and Latinos “have no education” and “no
jobs”, attacked Clinton’s outreach to those communities. “She has
abused the African American community, she has abused the Hispanic
community,” he proclaimed.”
Trump is in the middle of a three-day swing across Florida, a key election state where Clinton currently holds a four-point lead,
according to the RealClearPolitics aggregate of public polling. He told
the crowd in St Augustine that he was winning in the Sunshine state.
0 comments:
Post a Comment