Letters from an American - October 16, 2024
Episode Date: October 17, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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October 16th, 2024. Two Fox News Channel interviews bracketed today. One this morning with Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump in front of an audience of handpicked Republican women
in Georgia. The other by Democratic presidential candidate, Vice President
Kamala Harris, with host Brett Baier. Together, the two were a performance of dominance.
FNC billed Trump's so-called town hall as a chance for female voters, a demographic that
is swinging heavily to Harris, to ask Trump about issues they care about. But Hottest Gold and Liam Riley of CNN
reported that FNC had packed the audience with Trump supporters. The first question came from
the president of the Fulton County Republican Women, though she was not identified as such.
FNC then edited the broadcast to cut out remarks in which the attendees expressed support for Trump.
It seems unlikely that Trump attracted any new voters by speaking to an audience of loyalists audibly cheering him on.
After Trump refused to debate her again, Harris voluntarily moved into his right-wing territory, agreeing to an interview with FNC host Brett
Bayer. In that interview, Bayer reframed right-wing talking points as questions, essentially giving
Trump a second shot at a debate. Bayer kept talking over the vice president's attempts to
answer, even putting out a hand to interrupt her, in a stark contrast to FNC's deference to Trump.
Harris asked him to let her reply and then answered his questions, sometimes testily,
usually turning them into opportunities to contrast her own candidacy and record with Trump's.
Control of the interview changed abruptly when Harris called out Trump for referring to the enemy within
and talking about using the American military against those he considers enemies.
Bayer used that opportunity to show a clip of Trump saying he wasn't threatening anyone,
but the clip was edited to remove his threats against sick, evil, dangerous Marxists and
communists and fascists, including Representative
Adam Schiff, a Democrat of California, and the Pelosi's, presumably former House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, a Democrat of California, and her husband, who was attacked in 2022 by a man with a hammer
who wanted to force Nancy Pelosi to renounce the investigation
into the 2016 Trump campaign's ties to Russia. Harris had had enough propaganda.
Brett, I'm sorry, and with all due respect, that clip was not what he has been saying about the
enemy within that he has repeated when he's speaking about the American people.
That's not what you just showed. You and I both know that he's talked about turning the American
military on the American people. He has talked about going after people who are engaged in
peaceful protest. He has talked about locking people up because they disagree with him.
This is a democracy. And in a democracy,
the president of the United States in the United States of America should be able to handle
criticism without saying he locked people up for doing it. And this is what's at stake,
which is why you have someone like the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff saying
what Mark Milley has said about Donald Trump being a
threat to the United States of America. Simply by going on the right-wing network, Harris was
demonstrating dominance. Then, by answering as thoroughly as she did, she undercut the right-wing
narrative that she is stupid and inarticulate. By calling out the FNC for deliberately misleading its viewers,
she took command. Bayer, rather than Harris, was the one doing the post-interview spinning.
Writer Peter Wehner, who worked for Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, and George W.
Bush, wrote,
and George W. Bush wrote,
Brett Baier has rarely looked as bad or tendentious as he did in his interview with Kamala Harris.
On the flip side, this was one of her best interviews.
She dominated Brett.
All in all, it was quite a bad day
for MAGA World's most important media outlet.
In between the two FNC events were two others that also told a story. This one about
how the Republican Party's descent into MAGA is creating a new political coalition to defend
American principles. Trump held a town hall with undecided Latino voters moderated by Mexican
journalist Enrique Acevedo for Univision.
Members of the audience asked excellent questions. How would he bring down household costs? Who would
take the jobs left behind by undocumented workers if Trump deported them? And how much would that
drive up food costs? Why Trump took so long to stop the January 6th rioters? If he had caused
deaths during the pandemic by misleading Americans?, if he had caused deaths during the
pandemic by misleading Americans, and if he agrees with his wife Melania about protecting abortion
rights. But Trump did not answer the questions, instead regurgitating his usual talking points.
He promised to produce more oil and gas, called undocumented immigrants criminals,
repeated the lie about Haitian migrants eating
pets, and after notably referring to the January 6th rioters as we and law enforcement officers as
the others, called January 6th a day of love. The audience did not appear convinced.
Meanwhile, Vice President Harris joined more than 100
Republicans in Pennsylvania, near the spot where George Washington and more than 2,000 continental
soldiers crossed the Delaware River on Christmas night 1776 to surprise a garrison of British
soldiers at Trenton, New Jersey, where they won a strategic victory. Harris noted that those gathered were
also near Philadelphia, where in 1787, delegates from across the country gathered to write and sign
the U.S. Constitution. That work was not easy. The founders often disagreed, often quite passionately.
But in the end, the Constitution of the United States
laid out the foundations of our democracy, including the rule of law, that there would
be checks and balances, that we would have free and fair elections and a peaceful transfer of power.
And these principles and traditions have sustained our nation for over two centuries.
Sustained because generations of Americans, from all backgrounds, from all beliefs, have cherished them, upheld them, and defended them.
And now the baton is in our hands, she said.
Our hands, she said.
At stake in this race are the democratic ideals that our founders and generations of Americans before us have fought for.
At stake in this election is the Constitution of the United States, its very self.
Harris welcomed the Republicans in the crowd, saying that everyone there shared a core belief that we must put country before party.
The crowd chanted USA, USA, USA. Harris noted that many of the Republicans on stage had taken the same oath to the Constitution that she had. We here know the Constitution is not a relic from our past, but determines whether we are a country where the people can speak freely and even criticize the president without fear of being thrown in jail or targeted by the military.
Where the people can worship as they choose without the government interfering.
Where you can vote without fear that your vote will be thrown
away. All this and more depends on whether or not our leaders honor their oath to the Constitution.
Trump, she pointed out, tried to overturn the will of the people expressed in a free and fair
election, has vowed to use the military to go after any American who doesn't
support him, and has called for the termination of the Constitution. It is clear, she said,
Donald Trump is increasingly unstable and unhinged, and he is seeking unchecked power.
unchecked power. Trump, she said, must never again stand behind the seal of the President of the United States. And to those who are watching, she said, if you share that view,
no matter your party, no matter who you voted for last time, there is a place for you in this campaign. The coalition we have built has room for everyone
who is ready to turn the page on the chaos and instability of Donald Trump.
I pledge to you to be a president for all Americans, and I take that pledge seriously.
She reiterated her promise to appoint a Republican to her cabinet
and to establish a council on bipartisan solutions to strengthen the middle class,
secure the border, defend our freedoms, and maintain the nation's leadership in the world.
She noted that the country needs a healthy two-party system and described how the Senate
Intelligence Committee left
partisanship at the door. It was country over party in action when she sat on the committee,
she said, so I know it can be done. Our campaign is not a fight against something, she said. It is
a fight for something. It is a fight for the fundamental principles upon which we were founded. It is a
fight for a new generation of leadership that is optimistic about what we can achieve together,
Republicans, Democrats, and independents who want to move past the politics of division and blame
and get things done on behalf of the American people. We're all here together this beautiful afternoon because we
love our country and we know the deep privilege and pride that comes with being an American
and the duty that comes along with it. Imperfect though we may be, America is still that shining
city upon a hill that inspires people around the world. And I do believe it
is one of the highest forms of patriotism to fight for the ideals of our country.
So to people from across Pennsylvania and across our nation, let us stand up for the rule of law,
for our democratic ideals, and for the Constitution of the United States.
And in 20 days, we have the power to chart a new way forward, one that is worthy of this
magnificent country that we are all blessed to call home. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.