Trump should be heading for a massive shellacking in November, but insane liberals are fighting hard to get him re-elected by destroying statues of American heroes, rioting in the streets and letting off fireworks all night
By Piers Morgan
Daily Mail
June 23, 2020
Donald Trump should be preparing to pack his bags at the White House.
It’s
hard to imagine a worse scenario for any incumbent President trying to
secure re-election than his terrible handling of a global pandemic
resulting in America suffering the world’s worst coronavirus death toll and the US economy crashing to its worst levels since the Great Depression with 40 million job losses.
Trump
made things even worse when the country was engulfed by the worst race
riots for 50 years and he shamefully fuelled the fires with his
shockingly tone-deaf and incendiary response to the country’s rage at George Floyd’s murder at the knee of a racist cop.
Any one of those things would normally signal ballot box slaughter in election year.
Yet
somehow, unbelievably, Trump’s opponents are once again doing
everything in their power to wrestle another defeat from the jaws of
seemingly inevitable victory.
If you were scripting an escape route for
Trump it would involve liberal protesters tearing down statues of
America’s greatest icons, liberal leaders allowing virtual anarchy on
the streets to go unpunished, and a dramatic intensifying of the
absurdly self-defeating culture war nonsense that makes many Americans
fear the very soul of their nation is being dismantled.
From
a position of unprecedented weakness, Trump is now fighting back with
his clunky but undeniably effective triple whammy ‘America first’ fist
of patriotism, toughness and common sense.
Or rather, he’s being hauled off the ropes by his opponents losing their minds.
This
insanity has reached its peak over the past few days as protesters set
about destroying monuments to some of America’s most beloved historical
figures.
In Portland, Oregon, they
draped an American flag around a 100-year-old statue of the first
president, George Washington, set it on fire, pulled the statue down and
then urinated on it.
They said they did it because Washington owned slaves.
That’s true, he did.
But
he was also one of the Founding Fathers who established the United
States of America with a determination to eradicate slavery, which then
happened.
In San Francisco, protesters vandalized a
statue of another former president Ulysses E. Grant, the man who led the
Union Army in defeating the Confederates in the Civil War.
Again, they argued he was a slave owner.
And again, that’s true.
But
Grant was gifted one slave, despised the whole concept of having one,
and let him free within a year. He then wiped out the Ku Klux Klan by
pushing legislation through Congress to prosecute them. And he appointed
African-Americans to prominent government roles.
In
another part of the same Golden Gate Park, hundreds more protesters
tore down statues of Francis Scott Key, who wrote the lyrics to 'The
Star-Spangled Banner', because he too owned slaves.
This, again, is true. But he also represented a young Black man suing Georgetown College for his freedom in the 1830s.
And he wrote America’s National Anthem!
In
Philadelphia, the statue of abolitionist Matthias Baldwin was attacked
and sprayed with words like ‘colonizer’ and ‘murderer’.
Yet
Baldwin was a very outspoken critic of slavery, fought for
African-Americans to have the right to vote and founded a school in the
city for black children.
The
craziness has got so demented that author and activist Shaun King has
even called for statues of Jesus Christ to be removed. ‘I think the
statues of the white European they claim is Jesus should also come
down,’ he tweeted. ‘They are a form of white supremacy. Always have
been.’
All of this, set against the
backdrop of widespread looting and rioting during otherwise
predominantly peaceful George Floyd protests, will have the opposite
effect to the one the protesters claim to want.
It won’t persuade people to join their movement, it will turn them against it.
That’s not to say all their arguments are wrong.
I have no problem with statues of Confederacy leaders being removed.
As
Washington Post columnist Henry Olsen wrote yesterday: ‘The
Confederacy’s vice president, Alexander Stephens, said in his
“cornerstone speech”, the Confederacy rested on “the great truth, that
the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery — subordination to
the superior race — is his natural and normal condition.” Monuments to
this revolting sentiment have no place in a United States that is
dedicated to the opposite principle — that all men are created equal.’
I think most Americans would support that.
But
to destroy monuments to great Presidents, as with the defacing of Sir
Winston Churchill’s statue in London recently, actively alienates people
from supporting the Black Lives Matter cause. So, it will hinder, not
help the battle for racial equality and justice.
As does the failure to enforce the law.
In New York, people have been illegally letting off fireworks through the night in record numbers.
It’s also being seen as some kind of protest.
But against what? And to whose benefit?
All it’s doing is annoying most people in New York who just want a good night’s sleep.
Yet authorities are refusing to confront the firework miscreants because they don’t want to create more riots.
Brooklyn
Borough President Eric Adams told residents not to call 911 to report
the fireworks because some view them as a form of nonviolent protest.
Instead, he urged concerned neighbors to 'go talk to young people or the
people on your block who are using fireworks' and warn them of the
potential risks.
This is ridiculous and
fuels the ‘one rule for them, one for the rest of us’ mindset of
law-abiding Americans, something that Trump can and will exploit.
The
way for Democrats to win in November is simple: keep reminding the
American people how badly Trump’s handled the pandemic, how horrifically
the economy has tanked, and how atrociously he responded to George
Floyd’s murder.
It’s not difficult to
paint a pretty accurate picture of a president who completely lost
control of his country during its darkest hour, through his ineptitude,
complacency, narcissism and chronic lack of empathy.
But nobody’s talking about any of that right now.
Instead,
the news agenda is dominated by images of statues of beloved American
icons being destroyed, and by lawless rioting and looting in cities all
over the country.
During his
controversial speech at his poorly attended comeback rally in Tulsa,
Trump said: ‘The choice in 2020 is very simple. Do you want to bow
before the left-wing mob or do you want to stand up tall and proud as
Americans?’
Whatever you think of Trump, this is a very simple and powerful campaign message.
It
doesn’t help Democrats that their nominee Joe Biden has been restricted
to his home for much of the last few months due to his age and
vulnerability to coronavirus.
As Trump taunted: ‘Biden remains silent in
his basement in the face of this brutal assault on our nation and the
values of our nation. Joe Biden has surrendered to his party and to the
left-wing mob.’
It’s obvious how Trump will fight this election.
He
knows that if the debate over the next four months centers around his
abject failures with the pandemic and the collapsing economy, then he
may get crushed on November 3 – especially if by then, there’s a second
wave of the virus, and the economy hasn’t shot back up in the V-shaped
rebound he keeps promising.
But if he
can make the debate about toppled statues, liberals encouraging
lawlessness, and annoying fireworks, then he’s got a very good chance of
being re-elected.
In the run-up to the
2016 Election, I regularly warned liberals that their strategy to beat
Trump, based around constant self-righteous and often rankly
hypocritical rage, wouldn’t work.
They ignored me, carried on screaming, and lost.
My
message to liberals today remains the same: stop shrieking, stop statue
toppling, stop virtue-signalling, stop pandering to ridiculous
political correctness, and provide America with a vision for the future
that resonates better than Trump’s increasingly dystopian ideal.
It shouldn’t be difficult to do this given the state of the country.
But all I’m seeing is liberals committing political suicide.
As
Anthony Scaramucci, Trump’s former short-lived communications chief
who’s now become his biggest critic, told me on Good Morning Britain
today: ‘If they continue to tear down statues in the United States and
continue to riot, that will play into the president’s hands. As he
searches for a campaign narrative right now, that narrative will be that
people are trying to take away your cultural heritage. And he’ll pit
people against each other in a big culture war.’
Yes, he will.
And it might work.
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