It’s become a strange running joke at Donald Trump’s campaign rallies: the president keeps telling audiences that they’ll never see him in their home state again if he loses the 2020 race. At a recent event in Iowa, for example, the Republican said if he comes up short in the Hawkeye State, “I may never have to come back here again…. I’ll never be back.” He used the same line in Minnesota, Ohio, Florida, and North Carolina.
But campaigning in Georgia on Friday night, Trump used a new line for the first time.
“Could you imagine if I lose? What am I going to do? … I’m not going to feel so good. Maybe I’ll have to leave the country. I don’t know.”
It’s likely this was a clumsy attempt at humor, though it’s a curious thing for the president to joke about.
For one thing, Trump has spent several years embracing a performative patriotism, surrounding himself with American symbols as a way to demonstrate love of country. But his apparent joke in Georgia suggests the Republican has actually adopted a conditional patriotism: Trump loves the United States, and plans to stay here, just so long as he believes enough of the electorate loves him back.








