Former President Donald Trump is once again using hard-to-pin-down language to telegraph authoritarian ideas. This time we ought to be vigilant about how Trump knows exactly what he’s doing in these situations — and why it’s such an insidious rhetorical strategy.
Trump told a gathering of conservative Christians on Friday that if they got him into office, they would never have to vote again. “Christians, get out and vote. Just this time,” he pleaded at The Believers’ Summit in West Palm Beach, Florida. “You won’t have to do it anymore, you know what? Four more years, it’ll be fixed, it’ll be fine, you won’t have to vote anymore, my beautiful Christians.”
Trump is once again playing a game that he knows how to play very well.
Coming from a man who sought to overturn election results and pledges to be a “dictator for one day,” Trump’s comments raised eyebrows. A few days later, Fox News host Laura Ingraham tried to gently coax Trump multiple times into stating that his Friday remarks did not mean that he had any intentions to try to stay in office forever. This turned out to be a struggle.
“They’re saying that you said to a crowd of Christians that they won’t have to vote in the future,” Ingraham began, in an effort to prompt Trump to clarify his position. He replied first with a completely unrelated tangent about how Christians love him and Jews should vote for him, before finally addressing the question like this:
“I said, ‘Vote for me, you’re not gonna have to do it ever again.’ It’s true, because we have to get the vote out. Christians are not known as a big voting group, they don’t vote. And I’m explaining that to them: ‘You never vote. This time, vote. I’ll straighten out the country, you won’t have to vote any more, I won’t need your vote any more, you can go back to not voting.’”
Ingraham again prompted Trump with an opportunity to rule out anything more sinister: “You mean you don’t have to vote for you, because you’ll have four years in office.” Trump launched into a tangential point about gun owners, which Ingraham interrupted once more to goad Trump to address her point: “It’s being interpreted, as you are not surprised to hear, by the left as, ‘Well, they’re never going to have another election’ … Can you even just respond to that?”
Trump then repeated a similar set of points describing his pitch to his audience at the Christian rally: “You have to vote on Nov. 5. After that you don’t have to worry about voting any more. I don’t care, because we’re going to fix it, the country will be fixed and we won’t even need your vote any more because, frankly, we will have such love. If you don’t want to vote anymore that’s OK. And I think everybody understood it,” the former president said.
Ingraham asks Trump about his comments telling Christian backers they won't have to vote again in 4 years. Trump responds by saying Jews should have their heads examined if they vote for Dems. Ingraham presses him & Trump doesn't exactly quell concerns he wants to end elections. pic.twitter.com/khGeauqp9S
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 29, 2024
In a later exchange, Trump finally answered yet another attempt by Ingraham to get a clear answer: “But you will leave office after four years?”
Trump responded, almost under his breath, “Of course.”
He continued: “By the way. I did last time. I kept hearing, ‘He’s not going to leave, he’s not going to leave.’ Look, they are the ones that are a threat to democracy.”
To sum it up: Trump overwhelmingly doubled down on messaging that hints at despotism, and even his eventual reluctant acknowledgment of a four-year term was marred by a huge caveat that raises questions about how serious the acknowledgement even was.








