Barely 24 hours after Donald Trump delivered a speech intended to reset his 
staggering presidential campaign, his off-the-cuff suggestion that people 
resort to violence against his opponent has him right back in the ditch.

At a rally in North Carolina on Tuesday, Trump applied his signature 
sarcasm to a political third rail, stating that “the Second Amendment” may 
be the only way to stop Clinton from getting to appoint federal judges if 
she defeats him in November.

“Hillary wants to abolish, essentially abolish, the Second Amendment,” he 
said. “By the way, and if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, 
folks. Although the Second Amendment people, maybe there is, I don’t know. 
But I’ll tell you what, that will be a horrible day.”

The aside, delivered casually, drew light laughter from Trump’s crowd but a 
swift, emphatic rebuke from across the political spectrum, with Republicans 
and Democrats alike broadcasting their shock.

“You aren’t just responsible for what you say; you’re responsible for what 
people hear,” said former CIA director Michael Hayden during breaking news 
coverage of Trump’s comments on CNN.

Clinton did not take any questions after her event in Miami on Tuesday, but 
the main super PAC supporting her, Priorities USA Action, immediately 
circulated the video clip of Trump making the statement with the subject 
line, “Donald Trump Just Suggested That Someone Shoot Hillary Clinton.” It 
offered a four-word statement: “This is not okay.”

Trump’s surrogates, already positioned on television sets, were left 
without any plausible response as media coverage of the presidential 
campaign focused on the GOP nominee’s latest misstep. “Mr. Trump was saying 
exactly what he said,” spokeswoman Katrina Pierson said on CNN. The 
campaign itself put out a “statement on dishonest media” that did not even 
attempt to clean up Trump’s comment.

“It’s called the power of unification — 2nd Amendment people have amazing 
spirit and are tremendously unified, which gives them great political 
power,” said Jason Miller, a campaign senior communications adviser. “And 
this year, they will be voting in record numbers, and it won’t be for 
Hillary Clinton, it will be for Donald Trump.”

But it’s only the latest example of the unscripted candidate’s sense of 
humor getting him in trouble in the context of a presidential campaign.

Just days ago, Trump stirred controversy at a news conference by 
encouraging Russia to spy on Clinton and to uncover the 33,000 emails 
deleted from her private server. After letting the controversy boil for 
more than a day, Trump and his campaign team attempted to argue that he was 
joking and not, in fact, nudging a foreign government — described by 
Trump’s predecessor as GOP nominee as America’s “greatest geopolitical foe” 
— to spy on his political opponent.

In both cases, the carelessness with words carries broad, serious 
implications — in the political realm and beyond.

Trump’s “jokes” give his opponents fodder and force fellow Republicans into 
yet another round of inevitable disavowals and questions about whether they 
will continue to support their party’s nominee. In the past week, following 
Trump’s suggestion that the Russians hack Clinton’s server and his ensuing 
criticism of a Gold Star family whose son was killed in Iraq, mainstream 
Republicans have been distancing themselves from Trump with increasing 
velocity. New York Rep. Richard Hanna, former California GOP gubernatorial 
candidate Meg Whitman and Maine Sen. Susan Collins have all gone public in 
recent days to make it clear they won’t be supporting Trump and will 
instead cast votes for either Clinton or Libertarian Party candidate Gary 
Johnson.

Indeed, this latest unforced error comes as Trump’s own campaign 
desperately tries to stop the bleeding, beset by daily polls showing 
Clinton’s lead growing nationally and in swing states....




...But beyond politics, there are the potential real-world consequences of 
a presidential candidate — one who has spent the past week boldly asserting 
that the election itself may be “rigged” against him — speaking openly 
about citizens bearing arms as a response to Clinton presidency, especially 
in a country that is enduring a prolonged period of mass shootings by 
troubled, disaffected individuals and domestic terrorists, and rising 
violence enflamed by urban unrest and a fraying social fabric.

Bernice King, the daughter of Martin Luther King Jr., criticized Trump on 
Twitter. She wrote: “As the daughter of a leader who was assassinated, I 
find #Trump’s comments distasteful, disturbing, dangerous. His words don’t 
#LiveUp. #MLK”

Trump has been scolded more than once during his campaign for promoting 
violence against political opponents. At a rally in Cedar Rapids on the day 
of the Iowa caucuses, Trump offered to pay the legal fees of supporters who 
attacked anyone trying to throw fruit at him. “If you see somebody getting 
ready to throw a tomato, knock the crap out of them, would you? Seriously,” 
he said. “Just knock the hell — I promise you, I will pay for the legal 
fees. I promise. I promise.” As it turned out, there were no attempts to 
throw fruit at him at the rally.

Later in February, at a Las Vegas rally on the eve of the Nevada caucuses, 
Trump said of a protester, “I’d like to punch him in the face.”

“We’re not allowed to punch back any more,” Trump lamented in Las Vegas. 
“You know what they used to do to a guy like that in a place like this?” he 
said. “They’d be carried out on a stretcher, folks.”

And last month, Trump said he’d like to “hit” speakers at the Democratic 
National Convention who spoke ill of him.

“The things that were said about me. You know what, I wanted to hit a 
couple of those speakers so hard,” Trump said. “I was gonna hit this guy so 
hard, his head would spin. He wouldn’t know what the hell happened.”

Eight years ago, Clinton got into trouble for referencing the Robert F. 
Kennedy assassination, which happened in June 1968 in the midst of the 
presidential campaign, when explaining why she was staying in the 
Democratic primary despite Barack Obama having taken a commanding lead. 
Unlike Trump, however, she quickly clarified the comment and apologized to 
anyone who was offended by it.

Martin Mulholland, a spokesman for the Secret Service, did not directly 
address the question of whether the agency — which provides protection to 
both Trump and Clinton — plans to investigate the remark, but he wrote in 
an email to POLITICO, “The Secret Service is aware of the comment.”


Read more: 
http://www.politico.com/story/2016/08/donald-trump-campaign-statements-226840#ixzz4GtR6KYk7
 

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