This is an adapted excerpt from the Sept. 15 episode of “Inside with Jen Psaki.”
If getting totally embarrassed by Vice President Kamala Harris in front of more than 67 million debate watchers made Donald Trump furious — and you know that it did — it’s pretty clear the rest of the week’s events only added to his rage.
Let’s take a look at some of the things that are probably making Trump very, very mad right now: A Des Moines Register poll released on Sunday showed Harris cutting Trump’s lead in Iowa to just 4 points. To give you a sense of what that means, the same poll had Trump leading Joe Biden by 18 points in June. In 2016 and 2020, Trump won Iowa by about 9 points and Iowa hasn’t been a swing state since 2008.
Trump’s going back to the same playbook that he thinks won him the election in 2016: appealing to his base with fear.
On Saturday, at a Congressional Black Caucus dinner in Washington, D.C., Harris mocked Trump for his line in the debate about having “concepts of a plan.” And all week long, she filled stadiums with tens of thousands of people in crucial swing states such as North Carolina and Pennsylvania.
She also, of course, notched the endorsement of Taylor Swift, which is clearly still driving Trump nuts. On Sunday morning, he sent out a message on Truth Social, declaring, “I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT!”
I mean, that debate was so galvanizing for Harris — and so embarrassing for Trump — that Karl Rove basically called Trump stupid in the editorial pages of The Wall Street Journal.
So yes, Trump was embarrassed on Tuesday night, and he’s been embarrassed every day since, but in response, he isn’t retooling his campaign team. He isn’t planning a bus tour across the Midwest to connect with voters. Instead, he’s going back to the same xenophobic and racist playbook that he thinks won him the election in 2016: appealing to his base with fear — a fear of immigrants, a fear of Black and Latino communities, a fear of basically anyone who doesn’t look like him and JD Vance.
He’s doubled down on a claim debunked by the local police, the mayor and even the Republican governor of Ohio that Haitian immigrants in Springfield are eating pets. It was a claim that originated with a Facebook post from one person who later disavowed it. But none of the facts matter to Trump … they never have. Trump prompted the explosion of this conspiracy theory himself by elevating it on the debate stage and later vowing mass deportations starting in Springfield.
The result? A city being terrorized.
On Sunday, Wittenberg University in Springfield was put on high alert after someone threatened to shoot Haitians on campus. On Saturday, a bomb threat forced two hospitals to go into lockdown. Earlier in the week, multiple schools and municipal buildings were evacuated or closed because of similar threats, at least one of which used hateful language toward Haitians. NBC News also reports that a neo-Nazi group, which helped push the false claim, is now doxing local residents and officials who have publicly spoken out.








