With just a few weeks to go until the election, Donald Trump has tried to rewrite his record on women’s rights and pitch himself as a “protector” who will save women from fear and unhappiness. His case, however, is not only muddied by his long record of misogyny, but his ugly personal attacks on women.
In a lengthy, rambling speech in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on Wednesday, the Republican presidential nominee once again insulted his Democratic opponent, calling Vice President Kamala Harris “horrible” and a “dummy.” He said he was told to restrain himself when criticizing Harris because “women won’t like it.”
“I said, ‘I don’t care,’” he added.
Trump also seemed to suggest that more women should support him because of what he claimed were gains he made in combating human trafficking — an issue he referred to as “mostly in women” — when he was in the White House. As president, the issue was one of Trump’s top priorities, but experts have said that his sweeping crackdown on immigration severely impeded the fight against human trafficking. Jean Bruggeman of Freedom Network USA, a coalition of anti-trafficking service providers and advocates, told Time magazine in 2020 that the Trump administration ultimately chose to “ignore the needs of survivors and to reward traffickers.”








