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The backlash against former President Donald Trump’s recent comment to a Christian group that if he’s reelected, “you don’t have to vote again” in four years was swift and predictable.
Supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris quickly saw the comment as a promise of future authoritarian rule and a possible end to democracy. After all, Trump has supported those jailed for the Jan. 6 attack to overturn the 2020 election results, has more recently speculated on how he would be a “dictator” on the first day back in office and predicted a “bloodbath” if he does not win.
The “politics of hate, chaos and fear” is how the Harris for President campaign described Trump’s speech in West Palm Beach, Fla.
But let’s say Trump didn’t mean for his comment to be taken in that context. Let’s say that, as a Trump spokesman later tried to explain, the Republican nominee was talking about uniting the country so that all Americans would then be happy (and perhaps so pleased with events that a chore like voting would be seen as optional).
It’s entirely possible that the 78-year-old convicted felon who often sees the world mostly in the context of “what’s in it for me” would view this as the ultimate reassurance. Hey, vote me in, and your worries will be over. It wasn’t a promise to overthrow the government so much as a pledge to deliver what he assumed must be the goal of everyone at the Believers Summit (and beyond): A reprieve from uncertainty and angst.
The bottom line? That isn’t much better. It might be worse because some voters may buy into it.