close
Monday October 28, 2024

Trump unbound as US presidential race nears its end

By Reuters
October 28, 2024
Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign town hall meeting, moderated by Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, in Flint, Michigan, US, September 17, 2024. — Reuters
Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign town hall meeting, moderated by Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, in Flint, Michigan, US, September 17, 2024. — Reuters

GREENSBORO, North Carolina: With his third straight US presidential campaign coming down to the wire, Donald Trump mused at a rally about hydrogen-powered cars exploding, lamented how difficult it is to get spray paint off limestone and marveled at how billionaire backer Elon Musk’s rocket had returned to Earth in one piece.

He complained Democratic rival Kamala Harris wasn’t working as hard as he was, praised Chinese President Xi Jinping as “fierce” and called former President Barack Obama “a real jerk.”

His aides had billed the event in battleground North Carolina as economy-focused, but that issue was just the warm-up. To witness Trump as the Nov 5 election approaches and his race against Vice President Harris nears its end is to watch a candidate almost fully unbound. At a time when most politicians would be honing their closing arguments to voters, Trump often acts more like an entertainer on a farewell tour than someone who aims to lead the world’s most powerful nation.

His unfocused behavior and dark rhetoric risks alienating some voters in a race that, despite all he says, remains so tight that any swing of a few thousand votes in several competitive states could determine the next president.

He is giving Harris’ campaign ample ammunition to argue that he is more “unstable” and “unhinged” than ever. The Democratic candidate is increasingly embracing those terms and pointing to Trump’s ramblings as evidence of a tired, old man who isn’t fit for the presidency.

“In many, many ways Donald Trump is an unserious man, but the consequences of him being president of the United States are brutally serious,” Harris said last week. Trump, 78, defends his scattershot approach by saying he does something he calls “the weave” – in which he claims he always returns to his initial point – and supporters say his unscripted style is part of his appeal.

“His patented weave is a brilliant method to convey important stories and explain policies that will help everyday Americans turn the page from the last four years of Kamala Harris’ failures,” said Steven Cheung, a spokesperson for Trump’s campaign.

Trump’s rallies have always featured their share of diversions and odd tangents. But with the clock ticking, the former president seems content to burn precious minutes telling stories about his White House days, musing about long-dead athletes or simply going where his mind takes him.

“They gave Obama the Nobel Prize,” he said on Thursday in Las Vegas. “He didn’t even know why the hell he got it. He still doesn’t. He got elected and they announced he’s getting the Nobel Prize. I got elected in much bigger, better crazier election but they gave him the Nobel Prize.”

Though no rally is ever exactly alike, a consistent theme is Trump’s false assertion that in four short years Democrats have transformed the nation into a dystopian state.

He denounces his political opponents as the “enemy from within” and peppers his remarks with graphic accounts of murders and rapes of young women, false tales of violent gangs taking over small towns and debunked claims about immigrants eating stolen pets. “We’re like a garbage can for the world,” he bemoaned in Arizona.