Trump's campaign of incitement hits new extremes - Mother Jones
It was no surprise. Instead, call it the October reveal.
In the final days of the 2024 election, ugly rhetoric from Donald Trumps campaign drew major national attention when a speaker made a racist joke about Puerto Rico as part of the ex-presidents Oct. 27 rally at Madison Square Garden. The event was an inevitable culmination for the Trump campaign, a six-hour pageant of divisiveness and bigotry that featured multiple speakers launching racist and misogynistic personal attacks on Kamala Harris. It concluded with Trump at the podium delivering the same demagoguery he has used in dozens of rallies this year: painting a wildly exaggerated picture of national decay, promoting baseless conspiracy theories, and stoking fear and anger about an alleged invasion of America by murderous migrants.
Such themes have been at the dark heart of Trumps politics ever since he first ran for president nearly a decade ago. As he has taken these tactics to new extremes over the past few months, leaders in law enforcement and national security Mother Jones's Mark Follman spoke with have warned about a growing danger of far-right political violence inspired by Trumps messaging.
This is not theoretical. Its based on a lengthy history of violence associated with Trumps rhetoric, which by 2021 led a bipartisan group of top national security experts to take the extraordinary step of labeling Trump, effectively, a terrorist leaderthe de facto head of a violent extremist movement within the United States.