Donald Trump was in Orlando on Monday, where he addressed the International Association of Chiefs of Police and tried to turn the event into a political rally of sorts, assuming that the law-enforcement officials were his political allies.
Referring to the completed fight over Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court confirmation, the president told the chiefs, “It was a disgraceful situation brought about by people that are evil.” The president didn’t specify whether he was referring to Democrats, the women who accused the justice of sexual assault, or both, though he was clearly referencing Americans.
During a brief Q&A with reporters yesterday on the White House South Lawn, Trump fielded a question on his choice of words.
Q: Mr. President, what about your comments yesterday that some of these forces against Brett Kavanaugh were, quote, “evil”?
TRUMP: Yeah, I think they were. I think they were. Yeah…. I know many. I know fellow Americans that are evil. I know — are you saying we shouldn’t say that a fellow American is “evil”? I’ve known some fellow Americans that are pretty evil.
It’s a subject the president apparently feels so strongly about, he keeps using the word. Two weeks ago, during a press conference, Trump insisted that the criticisms of Kavanaugh were “being perpetuated by some very evil people — some of them are Democrats, I must say.”
A week later, Trump told an audience at a Mississippi rally, in reference to Kavanaugh’s critics, “These are really evil people.” The president then repeated the line this week, after Kavanaugh had already been sworn in.
Back in July, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) urged senators not to be “complicit” in “evil” by confirming Kavanaugh. Months later, Kavanaugh told senators, “A Democratic senator on this committee publicly referred to me as evil. ‘Evil.’ Think about that word.”
Trump has thought about it — and he seems to love it.









