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Sunday, September 13, 2020

Trump’s Nevada rally was an exercise in delegitimizing voting — and denying reality

President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally US President Donald Trump arrives to speak at a campaign rally at the Minden-Tahoe airport in Minden (50miles/80km south of Reno), Nevada on September 12, 2020. | BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

Trump keeps holding probable superspreader events in the middle of a pandemic.

President Donald Trump traveled to Minden, Nevada — a town about 50 miles south of Reno — for a rambling, grievance-filled campaign rally on Saturday.

Over the course of a 90-minute speech, Trump attacked mail-in voting, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, and Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, while lamenting his press coverage, long drives, and the fact he was not able to have Air Force One behind him as he spoke. He also once again suggested that he should be allowed to serve more than two terms in office, which would be unconstitutional.

Notably absent from his speech was anything approaching a cohesive second-term agenda or a policy platform. What little policy his speech did contain was delivered suggestively, in the context of what the president is against, including limiting fracking and teaching children “poisonous anti-American lies in school.” Far more of Trump’s remarks focused on attempts to demean his opponents and preemptively cast doubt on an election that national polls show him trailing in.

Trump has spent much of the summer searching for an attack that will stick to Biden — that he’s senile; he’s a puppet of the radical left; and that he’ll usher in the apocalypse — and all three messages were on display in abundance Saturday.

Biden, Trump claimed Saturday, is “unable,” a “pathetic human being,” and suggested that his physical and mental condition are such that he “doesn’t know he’s alive.” The president worked to assert vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris is the actual driver of Biden’s policy, incorrectly calling her to the left of Sen. Bernie Sanders, and telling supporters that if Biden were to win, Harris would become president “in about a month.” Later in the speech, Trump also told supporters that a Biden victory would “permanently destroy the lives and dreams of tens of millions of Americans ... and lead [to] countless deaths from suicide.”

It isn’t clear that these sorts of attacks have changed public opinion; many polls have found that most Americans believe Biden is the stronger candidate on public safety, and a new Fox News poll recently found more voters see Biden as “mentally sound” than the president.

Trump wants to delegitimize the November election

Trump devoted a great deal of time Saturday to going after the legitimacy of the November election, telling supporters that “we have a rigged election. It’s a rigged election.”

It’s not a new talking point for Trump, who has already mounted a sustained campaign against mail-in voting and the US Postal Service — and who continues to allege that there was widespread voter fraud in the 2016 election, when there was not.

But in an election where as many as six in 10 Americans say they plan to vote early and a historic number of ballots are likely to be cast by mail, such rhetoric takes on a dangerous new dimension. There’s a fair chance we won’t know who won on election night as ballots are counted — many states accept ballots postmarked on Election Day for days afterward — and Trump is already sending up a signal that he plans to dispute the results or even prematurely claim victory on Election Day if early returns show him ahead.

“The only way we’re tied is if they screw around with the ballots, which they will do in my opinion,” Trump said Saturday.

In anticipation of a candidate announcing they have won before ballots are all counted, Facebook and Twitter have announced new policies prohibiting candidates from “claiming victory before election results have been certified.”

Trump also suggested Saturday that his supporters should turn out as poll watchers, “because with you people watching the polls it’s going to be pretty hard to cheat. I’ll tell you, I wouldn’t want to be a cheater.”

The suggestion is a concerning one, however. There is a history of GOP poll watchers engaging in voter intimidation — one that led to a since-expired federal consent decree curbing such activity. With instances of armed Trump supporters engaging in pseudo-law enforcement vigilantism, there’s reason for concern that poll watching could lead to further voter intimidation in November.

Trump is still pretending Covid-19 doesn’t exist

In addition to his attacks on voting, Trump used his rally to hold forth on the merits of his coronavirus response.

“We’re at like, around 180,000 [deaths],” he told rallygoers Saturday. “We’ve done an incredible job.”

In reality, more than 193,000 people have died from Covid-19 in the US, and the US response has been uniquely poor compared to other nations. On Friday alone — the first day in more than five months that Canada reported zero Covid-19 deaths — more than 1,000 Americans died.

As evidenced by Saturday’s unmasked and undistanced crowd, though, the Trump campaign has by and large decided to move on from the coronavirus, even as the US death toll continues to climb. A gathering the size of the president’s rally flies in the face of virtually every pandemic best practice under the sun, and, in fact, Trump’s event was shunted from the Reno airport to neighboring Minden after Reno officials refused to allow the rally to be held for public health reasons.

As Vox’s Aaron Rupar wrote after a similar Trump rally in North Carolina last week, the president’s insistence on holding rallies reflects an unwillingness to learn from past mistakes that borders on callousness:

The recent batch of Trump rallies were the first since June 20, when he held one at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that ended up being a disaster. The Trump campaign’s decision to ignore warnings from public health experts likely fueled a spike in coronavirus cases in the area.

“In the past few days, we’ve seen almost 500 new cases, and we had several large events just over two weeks ago, so I guess we just connect the dots,” Tulsa City/County Health Department Director Dr. Bruce Dart said days after the rally, according to the Associated Press.

Herman Cain, a prominent Trump supporter who was photographed at the rally without a mask, contracted Covid-19 after the rally and died.

In short, between spinning a fictional narrative on the pandemic, eroding trust in voting, and his personal attacks on Biden, Trump spent a disparate amount of time Saturday constructing an alternate reality for himself and his supporters. It wasn’t a policy speech — it was barely even a reelection message — but it was pure, unfiltered Trump.


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Biden ahead in Minnesota and Arizona, CBS polls indicate


Two of the most traditionally predictable states in U.S. presidential elections are Arizona and Minnesota. New polls released Sunday showed Democratic nominee Joe Biden ahead in both of them.

A CBS News Battleground Tracker poll put Biden ahead of President Donald Trump in Minnesota among likely voters by a margin of 50 percent to 41 percent. There would be nothing unusual about a Democrat winning Minnesota; the last Republican presidential candidate to carry the state was President Richard M. Nixon in 1972. Trump did come within 2 percentage points of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Trump‘s campaign has looked to Minnesota as a state it could possibly pick up this year.

Polling also placed Biden ahead of Trump in Arizona, by a margin of 47 percent to 44 percent. Arizona has been one of the most dependably Republican states in presidential elections, with only one Democrat (President Bill Clinton in 1996) winning the state in the last 17 presidential elections. Trump won the state in 2016 by 3 percentage points, but the Biden campaign has targeted it this year.

In Arizona, Biden benefited from a lopsided advantage among Hispanic voters, 62 percent to 27 percent. Trump had a significant edge there among voters 65 years old and older, prevailing 63 percent to 35. (In Minnesota, in contrast, Biden and Trump were tied among voters in that age group.)

Biden also had an edge over Trump among female voters in both states, particularly white women with college degrees.

The polls were conducted on behalf of CBS News by YouGov Sept. 9-11, based on samples of 1,122 registered voters in Arizona and 1,100 in Minnesota. Margins of error among registered voters were plus or minus 3.8 percentage points in Arizona and 3.6 points in Minnesota.



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L.A. mayor: 'Instead of hitting golf course,' Trump and Congress should ensure wildfire aid


Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti on Sunday urged an end to partisanship in deciding which states get disaster aid as California and the rest of the West Coast reel from devastating wildfires.

“Whether it's twin hurricanes on the Gulf Coast or fires here on the West Coast. We're one nation. And, sometimes looking at the leadership that comes out, it's easy to forget that,” Garcetti said on CNN’s “State of the Union” ahead of a planned visit to California Monday by President Donald Trump.

“It's taken three weeks. I'm glad he's coming, but we need much more help," the Democratic mayor went on. "When we have firefighters dying on the line and Washington refuses to help states and refuses to help local governments that are the first responders to emergencies like this, it's unconscionable.”

Pressed by CNN host Jake Tapper on what specifically the president could be doing, given that he declared an emergency in California three weeks ago, Garcetti said there was a “refusal in blaming blue states over red states.” The president, who is on a three-day campaign tour of the West, is scheduled to meet with local and federal officials near Sacramento on Monday to assess the vast wildfire damage.

“Instead of hitting the golf course or going on vacation, the president and Congress respectively should sit down and make sure there is assistance for these brave men and women who are protecting our lives and our property,” Garcetti added.

Trump has repeatedly attacked Democratic elected officials in California over the fires, similar to how he criticized their management of previous years’ blazes. He has accused leaders of insufficiently raking dead forestry, something Garcetti nodded to on Sunday.

“He is going to come out here and probably tell us, ‘I'm going to send you rakes instead of more help,’” Garcetti said on CNN. "We need actual help, material help, not based on our party affiliation or how we voted."

The wildfire crisis is not the only case of Trump appearing to factor politics into his emergency assistance decision-making.

Throughout the coronavirus pandemic he has lambasted Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose state was the main epicenter of the outbreak in the spring, and has also gone after Democratic Govs. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, who was being considered by Joe Biden as a vice presidential candidate, and Jay Inslee of Washington state, who had a short-lived bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.



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Manhunt ensues after LA County deputies are ‘ambushed’ in patrol car

Apparent security camera footage shows a person allegedly firing into a police car in Compton, California Saturday evening

Two law enforcement officials are in critical condition and a suspect is at large after the officers were shot in their patrol vehicle in Compton, California on Saturday, according to media reports.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office posted moments after the shooting what appears to be security footage of the incident on their Twitter page, saying that one male deputy and one female deputy were “ambushed” and are going through surgery after sustaining “multiple gunshot wounds.”

The incident happened around 7 p.m. PDT at the corner of Willowbrook Avenue and Compton Boulevard in front of a metro station, KABC-TV in Los Angeles reports.

The video posted to Twitter shows an individual walking up to the police vehicle and motioning his arms toward the front passenger window before turning to their left and running away.

READ MORE: Florida sheriff prohibits deputies, visitors from wearing masks

While the deputies’ names have not been disclosed at this time, it has been revealed that one is a 24-year-old man and a 31-year-old woman, who is the mother of a six-year-old.

The local news outlet reports that both victims had become deputies just 14 months prior to the incident.

In a press conference, authorities revealed that one of the deputies was able to give a “very generic suspect description” of a “dark skin male,” but no other details were provided.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva spoke at the press conference, calling the shooting “a cowardly act.”

READ MORE: Georgia deputy placed on leave after viral video captures assault on Black man during arrest: ‘Don’t kill him!’

“The two deputies were doing their job, minding their own business, watching out for the safety of the people on the train,” Villanueva stated. “To see somebody just walk up and start shooting on them. It pisses me off. It dismays me at the same time. There’s no pretty way to say it.”

President Donald Trump weighed in on the situation on Twitter, writing “Animals that must be hit hard” in one post.

The president also retweeted a request for prayer for the officers from his son, Donald Trump, Jr., saying: “If they die, fast trial death penalty for the killer. Only way to stop this!”

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