On Sunday, Donald Trump was targeted in an apparent assassination attempt. Less than 24 hours after the alleged would-be shooter was taken into custody, the Republican told Fox News Digital why the suspect targeted him: Ryan Wesley Routh “believed” Democratic rhetoric, Trump argued, about the former president posing a “threat to democracy.”
There were all kinds of problems with the claim, including the disconnect between the message and the messenger: Trump routinely accuses people and entities of being “threats to democracy” — the same phrase he now considers too incendiary to be repeated. The GOP nominee, just over the last few months, has told the public that President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and even The New York Times should all be seen as a “threat to democracy.”
The former president didn’t literally say that “people should stop using the phrase that I use all of the time,” but that seemed to be the gist of his position.
Hours later, his running mate confronted a similar problem. HuffPost reported:
Speaking after another apparent attempt on Trump’s life, [Ohio Sen. JD] Vance called for a “reduction in the ridiculous and inflammatory political rhetoric.” … “We cannot tell the American people that one candidate is a fascist, and if he’s elected, it is gonna be the end of American democracy,” he insisted.
One of these days, Vance is going to meet his running mate, and they’ll probably have a fascinating conversation.
“We cannot tell the American people that one candidate is a fascist”? OK, but Trump tells the American people that one candidate is a fascist with surprising regularity.
As recently as July, Trump described the Biden administration as a “fascist government,” as his campaign operation issued a fundraising appeal asserting as fact that President Joe Biden is “a threat to democracy.”
Two weeks earlier, the former president wrote on his social media platform, “JOE BIDEN IS A THREAT TO DEMOCRACY, AND A THREAT TO THE SURVIVAL AND EXISTENCE OF OUR COUNTRY ITSELF!!!” The hysterical missive dovetailed with months of rhetoric in which Trump has told voters that the United States would likely cease to exist if he loses.








