Letters from an American - August 30, 2024
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August 30th, 2024.
Trump and the MAGA movement garnered power through performances that projected dominance
and cowed media and opponents into silence.
Rather than disqualifying him from the highest office in the United States, Trump's mocking
of a disabled reporter,
bragging about assaulting women, and calling immigrants rapists and criminals seemed to demonstrate his dominance and strengthen him with his base. In July, the Republican National
Convention celebrated that performance with a deliberate appropriation of the themes of
professional wrestling, including a display
by an actual professional wrestler. Their plan for winning the 2024 election seems to have been
to put forward more of the same. But the national mood appears to be changing. President Joe Biden's
decision to decline the Democratic nomination for president opened the way for the Democrats to launch a new,
younger, more vibrant vision for the country. Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris
and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, have promised to continue and even to expand
slightly the programs that under the Biden-Harris administration have started the process of rebuilding the country's infrastructure, bringing back manufacturing, and investing in industries
to combat climate change. As the country did before 1981, they are promising to continue
to focus on supporting a strong middle class rather than those at the top of the economy.
Harris and Walz are building on this economic base
to recenter the United States government on the idea of community.
They have deliberately rejected the identity politics
that Trump used so effectively to assert his dominance
and have instead emphasized that they see the country
not as a community defined by winners and losers,
but as one in which everyone has value and should have the same opportunities for success. Last night, CNN's Dana
Bash asked Harris, whose mother immigrated to the U.S. from India and whose father immigrated from
Jamaica, to respond to Trump's suggestion that she happened to turn black for political advantage,
questioning a core part of your identity.
Harris responded, same old tired playbook.
Next question, please.
And she laughed.
That's it?
Bash asked.
That's it?
Harris answered.
Harris's refusal to accept the MAGA terms of engagement, along with the exuberant
support for Harrison Walls, has Trump, Republican vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance, and MAGA
Republicans reeling. That, in turn, has made them seem vulnerable, and that vulnerability is now
opening up room for pundits from a range of outlets to challenge them.
They seem to be losing the ability to control the public conversation by asserting dominance.
This change has been evident this week in the response to Trump's visit to Arlington National Cemetery with the family of a soldier who died in the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan three years ago
for campaign videos and photos attacking Harris, despite the fact that federal law prohibits
campaign activities in the cemetery, in what is widely considered hallowed ground.
The moment almost passed unnoticed, as it likely would have in the past, but Esquire's
Charles Pierce asked in his blog,
how the hell was Trump allowed to use Arlington National Cemetery as a campaign prop?
Led by NPR, different outlets began to dig into the story.
And Trump, Vance, Trump's spokesperson, and Trump's campaign manager, Chris LaCivita,
all tried to brush off their lawlessness with their
usual rhetoric. Trump tried to change the subject to say he was being unfairly attacked for supporting
a military family. Vance tried to suggest that Harris should have attended the private ceremony
and that for criticizing it, she should go to hell, although she hadn't commented on it.
The spokesperson suggested that the female cemetery official who tried to stop them was experiencing a mental health episode.
And La Cevita, a leading figure in the Swift Boat Veterans' attacks on John Kerry in 2004,
reposted an offending video to trigger Army officials, he said.
It hasn't flown. Today, MSNBC's Dasha Burns asked Trump directly,
should your campaign have put out those videos and photos? Trump answered, well, we have a lot
of people. You know, we have people, TikTok people. You know, we're leading the internet.
That was the other thing. We're so far above her on the internet. Burns interrupted and followed up. But on that hallowed ground, should they have put out
the images? Trump said, well, I don't know what the rules and regulations are. I don't know who
did it. And I, it could have been them. It could have been the parents. It could have been somebody.
Burns interrupted again. It was your campaign's TikTok
that put out the video. Trump answered, I really don't know anything about it. All I do is I stood
there and I said, if you'd like to have a picture, we can have a picture. If somebody did it, this
was a setup by the people in the administration that, oh, Trump is coming to Arlington. That looks
so bad for us. In the days since Biden stepped out of contention,
Trump has been flailing,
often complaining that it is unfair
that Biden isn't his opponent any longer.
But his behavior has rocketed downhill
since the new grand jury delivered a new indictment
revising the four charges against him
for trying to overturn the results
of the 2020 presidential election and install himself in power. Karen Tumulty wrote in the Washington Post today
that Trump is spiraling, noting that in the space of 24 hours, he posted about Harris engaging in
a sex act, promoted QAnon slogans, and called for prison for his political opponents.
Tumulty notes that Trump's team has
been trying to get him to focus on the issues voters care about, but that after he listlessly
delivers some lines from the teleprompter, he gets bored and begins recycling the rants from his
rallies. Harris has stayed silent about his behavior, Tumulty says a campaign staffer told her,
because why would we step in this man's way?
The Harris campaign wants microphones left on throughout the planned September 10th debate,
expecting that Trump will not be able to contain the rants that used to serve his interests,
but now turn voters off.
DeVance has left the job of trying to clean up after Trump, but he's not a
skilled politician. Asked by John Berman about Trump's social media attacks, Vance suggested
that Trump was bringing fun and jokes to politics to lift people up. But observers on social media
noted that claiming that attacks are jokes is a key part of asserting dominance.
Vance himself went after Harris by saying that he had an early version of Harris's CNN interview,
and then posting an old meme of a young Miss Teen USA who appeared to panic when answering a question and produced a nonsensical answer.
When Berman told him that
the young woman contemplated self-harm after becoming a national joke and asked if he would
like to apologize for bringing up that old video, Vance declined to apologize, suggested we should
laugh at ourselves, and repeated that we should try to have some fun in politics.
Vance got into deeper trouble, though, when asked to
explain Trump's statement when he told Dasha Burns that he opposes Florida's six-week abortion ban.
This November, Floridians will have to vote yes or no on a constitutional amendment that would
put abortion rights similar to those of Roe v. Wade into the state constitution.
Trump's opposition to that amendment reflects the political reality that abortion bans are
unpopular, even in Republican-dominated states. But the MAGA base is fervently anti-abortion.
That thump-thump you just heard is the entire pro-life movement going under the bus, one wrote.
A campaign spokesperson promptly tried to walk the statement back by saying that Trump
has not yet said how he will vote on the ballot initiative in Florida,
which Vance reiterated on CNN. When Berman pressed him on it, though,
Vance appeared to lose the ability to hear the question, suggesting the feed was bad.
This afternoon, Trump announced he will side with the anti-abortion activists and vote against the amendment to the Florida Constitution that would restore the rights that were in Roe v. Wade.
Harrison Walls, meanwhile, have announced a national bus tour to highlight reproductive
freedom. It will start in Palm Beach, Florida, where the Trump Organization's Mar-a-Lago property
is located. Today, lawyers for Ruby Freeman and Shea Moss, the election workers Trump ally Rudy
Giuliani defamed by accusing them of fraud in the 2020 election, asked a federal court to
enforce the judgment that awarded them $146 million. They have asked for a court order
requiring Giuliani to turn over his properties in New York and Florida, his luxury car,
and his personal valuables, including three New York Yankees World Series rings.
Giuliani's spokesperson accused the women of bullying Giuliani.
The Lincoln Project, which believes that needling Trump is the best way to rattle him,
today released a video that portrays Trump as a predatory animal who is old, past his prime, and abandoned by his pack.
Rather than engaging in his final hunt, he has found himself the prey.
The voiceover intones, the circle of life eventually closes on all things. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Denham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.