TEMPE, Ariz. — Donald Trump's allies have tried in vain to persuade him to stop venting his rage against ''enemies from within" in the campaign's waning days. But he keeps going.
In his rallies and interviews, the former president is increasingly fixated on the Americans he believes have wronged or betrayed him. They are worse, he says, than foreign adversaries of the United States. And he's made plain his desire to use the power of the federal government, including the military, to go after them.
''The crazy lunatics that we have — the fascists, the Marxists, the communists, the people that we have that are actually running the country,'' Trump said this month at a rally in Wisconsin. ''Those people are more dangerous — the enemy from within — than Russia and China and other people.''
When given the opportunity to hedge, he's doubled down.
Howard Kurtz of Fox News told Trump in an interview last weekend that ''enemies from within'' is ''a pretty ominous phrase, if you're talking about other Americans.''
''I think it's accurate,'' Trump responded.
The threat to settle personal grievances from the Oval Office has so alarmed some of Trump's former senior aides that they've labeled him a fascist. Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump's Democratic rival, agreed that authoritarian, ultranationalist ideology describes Trump.
''It's either Donald Trump in there stewing over his enemies list, or me, working for you, checking off my to-do list,'' Harris said Thursday in Georgia.