Politics / September 20, 2024

There’s No Low Trump Won’t Go

The Republican presidential nominee is peddling lies about Haitian migrants and blaming the Democrats after a thwarted assassination attempt.

Sasha Abramsky

Republican presidential nominee former president Donald Trump speaks at the Israeli American Council National Summit at the Washington Hilton on September 19, 2024, in Washington, DC.


(Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images)

With the election just a month and a half away, Donald Trump’s political rhetoric is becoming even more degraded. The Republican presidential nominee has spent the past two weeks peddling a debunked rumor, spread by his running mate, about Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, eating cats and dogs.

Has Trump suddenly joined the ranks of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, or PETA? Hardly. After all, he recently enthusiastically accepted the endorsement of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—whose increasingly bizarre résumé includes beheading a whale carcass, dumping a dead bear in Central Park, and, according to Vanity Fair, eating dogs (an allegation he has denied).

Perhaps Trump’s children or his wife have urged him to pay more attention to animal rights? Again, not likely. In June 2020, Vanity Fair ran a long article about Donald Trump Jr’s lavish big game hunting trips, which cost the American taxpayer tens of thousands of dollars in Secret Service protections. In one notorious example, his sheep hunting expedition to Mongolia resulted in taxpayers’ footing a security bill of more than $76,000. Eight years earlier, in 2012, Eric and Don Jr journeyed to Africa to bag elephants, crocodiles, buffalo, and leopards. They gleefully posed for pictures with a dead leopard draped over them. Donald Jr. was also photographed holding a dead elephant’s tail. And he sat for a photo, hunting rifle held aloft, wearing a belt of cartridges, next to a dead buffalo that, presumably, he had just bagged. During that same period, Ivanka Trump was hawking clothes she had designed, complete with rabbit fur pompoms. PETA detailed how some of these rabbits were skinned alive in slaughterhouses in China before being turned into baubles for the rich and famous. And, both Ivanka and Melania have been photographed over the years wearing lavish fur coats.

The Trump children kill for sport and for pleasure rather than out of necessity, yet that doesn’t seem to have triggered their father’s outrage or disgust. That is because Trump’s outrage, much like the rumor about any cat- or dog-eating in Springfield, is entirely manufactured. It has nothing to do with a genuine concern for animals—or, for that matter, pet owners in Springfield—and everything to do with whipping up anti-immigrant hysteria. Tapping into xenophobia and racism is, Trump seems to believe, his easiest, and perhaps his only, pathway back to power.

But, despite the plastic nature of Trump’s concern for Springfield’s four-legged residents, in the wake of Trump’s foul oratory, the Haitian community has been bombarded with threats, and schools in Springfield have faced warnings of bomb attacks. The situation has gotten so out of control that the Republican governor of Ohio, hoping to head off the threats, has stationed state police in city schools and bomb-sniffing dogs have been deployed throughout the city. Trump’s language has been as irresponsible as was Elon Musk’s last month, when the tycoon’s X platform amplified rumors in the UK that three young girls stabbed to death in northern England had been the victims of an undocumented immigrant asylum-seeker, and Musk himself posted that “civil war is inevitable.” Following that rumor-fest, far-right mobs in dozens of cities attempted to burn down hotels housing the asylum-seekers.

How utterly appalling that, in an era in which school shootings in the United States have become a dime a dozen, the ex-president would light a fuse that could result in conflagrations against immigrant children in public schools in Ohio. How else to think of this vile man as anything other than an arsonist, a man determined to burn down everything that, and everyone who, stands in his way?

Meanwhile, for the second time this summer, Trump faced an assassination attempt. This time around, no bullet nicked his ear, and the Secret Service successfully deflected the threat, in the form of a gunman lurking in the bushes on the periphery of Trump’s Florida golf course, before anyone was hurt.

Has Trump had a come-to-Jesus moment regarding the inadvisability of letting pretty much anyone purchase high-velocity, semiautomatic weaponry, or a realization that amping audiences up into paroxysms of rage does profound damage to the idea of a civil, peaceful, political arena? Not at all. Instead, he has accused Biden and Harris of creating the conditions in which people feel free to take potshots at him, and has promoted deep-fake images of Harris in a Soviet uniform. He has also promised to visit Springfield in the coming weeks, an event that, I am sure, will only further inflame passions and further endanger local immigrants.

With the former president and Vice President Harris locked in a close race, it’s no wonder that so many people around the world look at America and see a fiasco in the making. Trump is showing a willingness to stoop to new lows even for him. And, in so doing, he is putting lives at risk in Springfield and far beyond.

We need your support

What’s at stake this November is the future of our democracy. Yet Nation readers know the fight for justice, equity, and peace doesn’t stop in November. Change doesn’t happen overnight. We need sustained, fearless journalism to advocate for bold ideas, expose corruption, defend our democracy, secure our bodily rights, promote peace, and protect the environment.

This month, we’re calling on you to give a monthly donation to support The Nation’s independent journalism. If you’ve read this far, I know you value our journalism that speaks truth to power in a way corporate-owned media never can. The most effective way to support The Nation is by becoming a monthly donor; this will provide us with a reliable funding base.

In the coming months, our writers will be working to bring you what you need to know—from John Nichols on the election, Elie Mystal on justice and injustice, Chris Lehmann’s reporting from inside the beltway, Joan Walsh with insightful political analysis, Jeet Heer’s crackling wit, and Amy Littlefield on the front lines of the fight for abortion access. For as little as $10 a month, you can empower our dedicated writers, editors, and fact checkers to report deeply on the most critical issues of our day.

Set up a monthly recurring donation today and join the committed community of readers who make our journalism possible for the long haul. For nearly 160 years, The Nation has stood for truth and justice—can you help us thrive for 160 more?

Onwards,
Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

Sasha Abramsky

Sasha Abramsky is The Nation's Western Correspondent. He is the author of several books, including The American Way of Poverty, The House of Twenty Thousand Books, Little Wonder: The Fabulous Story of Lottie Dod, the World's First Female Sports Superstar, and most recently Chaos Comes Calling: The Battle Against the Far-Right Takeover of Small-Town America.

More from The Nation

Soulmates: Mark Robinson joins the stage with Donald Trump during a rally at The Farm at 95 on April 9, 2022, in Selma, North Carolina.

Why a “Black Nazi” Fit Right in With the Modern GOP Why a “Black Nazi” Fit Right in With the Modern GOP

Republicans might disavow Mark Robinson now, but they elevated him knowing his extremism.

Jeet Heer

Vice President Kamala Harris arrives at a

The Diversity of Harris’s Supporters Was on Display at Oprah’s Town Hall The Diversity of Harris’s Supporters Was on Display at Oprah’s Town Hall

The “Unite for America” rally showed just how many different constituencies Harris has. Now the challenge is turning their enthusiasm into organizing.

Joan Walsh

Forward Or Back?

Forward Or Back? Forward Or Back?

The stark choice between candidates.

OppArt / Peter Kuper

Members of the Florida delegation cast their votes on the second day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on August 20 in Chicago, Illinois.

Could Harris Take Florida and North Carolina? The Data Suggests She Can. Could Harris Take Florida and North Carolina? The Data Suggests She Can.

If Harris’s support among Black voters continues to consolidate as it has over the past two months, then she stands a very strong chance of winning both states.

Steve Phillips

The GOP Effort to Disrupt the Election Has Already Begun

The GOP Effort to Disrupt the Election Has Already Begun The GOP Effort to Disrupt the Election Has Already Begun

From Georgia to Nevada, Republicans are trying to undermine and delay early voting.

Elie Mystal

Donald Trump and JD Vance during a rally at Herb Brooks National Hockey Center on July 27, 2024, in St Cloud, Minnesota.

Trump and Vance Are Using One of America's Oldest Racist Playbooks Trump and Vance Are Using One of America's Oldest Racist Playbooks

By falsely linking Haitians in Springfield to the spread of infectious diseases, the GOP candidates are joining a long, terrible history.

Gregg Gonsalves