The Daily Escape:
Weâve said since 2015 that some epithet or statement by Trump would eventually be the last straw disqualifying him from holding political office. But none qualified as âdisqualifyingâ enough. In fact, the sum of all of them wasnât sufficient to send him to the sidelines.
But, a noxious statement about Puerto Rico by a comedian no one has ever hear of may do the trick that ârapistsâ and âshithole countriesâ and/or âgrab them by the pussyâ couldnât do: Deny Trump just enough votes that Harris wins in Pennsylvania.
That comedian called Puerto Rico a âfloating island of garbageâ. He talked about black people carving watermelons for Halloween. He  made a ribald joke about Hispanic fertility. His act became the dominant news story about the rally, obscuring whatever message Trump might have hoped to close with.
Now, Puerto Rican activists in Pennsylvania (the state with the third-largest Puerto Rican population, after Florida and New York) seem convinced the flap is going to do real damage to Trump there. This would be a real problem for him since his strategy to flip Biden 2020 states relies heavily on improving his performance with non-white voters.
This is proof why candidates donât close out their campaigns with edgy insult comics.
The racism and fascism Trumpâs MAGA Republicans displayed at Madison Square Garden (MSG) is usually restricted to their media bubble, where itâs just normal conversation. The backlash against it among people in the real world appears to have shocked the Trump campaign so much that the candidate is running away from his own closing argument. That happened on Monday when Trump told an audience in Georgia, âIâm not a Nazi.â
Harrisâs closing argument was different: She delivered an address on the Ellipse at the National Mall on Tuesdayâthe site of Trump’s speech inciting the Jan. 6 insurrection. By choosing the Ellipse as the location for her âclosing argument,â Harris helped to reclaim it as a sacred ground of our democracy.
Much of her speech was familiar to those of us who have followed the campaign. Her indictment of Donald Trump was crisp and direct, and her list of policy objectives was meticulous and thorough. But she was also obviously making a pitch to any swing voters who are still on the fence. A sample of her speech:
- âOn day one, if elected, Donald Trump would walk into that office with an enemies list. When elected, I will walk in with a to-do list full of priorities on what I will get done for the American people.
- We have to stop pointing fingers and start locking arms. It is time to turn the page on the drama and the conflict, the fear and division. It is time for a new generation of leadership in America.
- Look, we know who Donald Trump is: He is the person who stood at this very spot, nearly four years ago, and sent an armed mob to the United States Capitol to overturn the will of the people in a free and fair election. An election that he knew he lost.
- Unlike Donald Trump, I don’t believe people who disagree with me are the enemy. He wants to put them in jail. I’ll give them a seat at the table.
- Iâll be honest with you, Iâm not perfect. I make mistakes. But hereâs what I promise you: I will always listen to you, even if you donât vote for me.
- I will fight to restore what Donald Trump and his hand-selected Supreme Court justices took away from the women of America.
- So, America, let us reach for that future. Let us fight for this beautiful country we love. And in 7 days, we have the power to turn the page, and start writing the next chapter in the most extraordinary story ever told.â
As Harris was rising to the occasion for her closing argument, Trump was reprising the greatest hits from his MSG hate-fest closing argument during a Monday speech at Mar-a-Lago:
âThe love in that room, it was breathtaking. Thereâs never been an event that beautiful. It was a love fest. It was love for our country.â
He said MSG held 100,000 when it holds 20,000. He then repeated all of his usual lies. So much for his closing argument.
Letâs talk about how we get through the next few days: You should avoid screens to the extent possible as weâve entered peak Psychological Warfare time. There are Right Wing malign actors attempting to influence you and others. Their advertising money is flowing to the seven states like via a firehose. Avoid it if you can.
You should accept that so far, youâve done all that you can do to see good triumph over evil in the 2024 elections. That with one week to go, the outcome should be very nearly sealed, but it isnât.
The question is how to accept the outcome if it doesnât go the way youâre hoping it will go. For that Wrongo has no answer. Many are wrongly saying that at least it will be all over next Tuesday, and weâll âknowâ. But we wonât, the final battle will be fought for at least the two months after that.
So we need to prepare ourselves for an ongoing fight. Trump is already claiming the vote in Pennsylvania is fraudulent (That heâs already crying foul is good news for Harris). It could not be more obvious that he wonât accept a loss next Tuesday, no matter what the final margin looks like. Although of course his claims will be much harder to deal with if the election actually is as close as the polls suggest it is today.
The hard reality is that one of the two major Parties will never accept defeat in the presidential election.
This in turn means that in the wake of a Trump defeat on November 5, another battle is going to have to be fought, between then and when the outcome is certified by Congress on January 6.
This is a fight that wonât end Tuesday night. So we need to be financially and emotionally prepared to continue funding the fight to win the Electoral College post-November. That means giving money to Mark E. Elias who is taking on Republicans across the country that are attempting to enforce anti-democratic voting laws, along with his firm, Democracy Docket.
Hereâs a bonus cartoon:
“The Truth is out (up) there”!
In our household , we are hoping for early reports of Harris – Walz margins of at least 6 figures in enough battle-ground states. We are also impressed by comments from key election officials in many states about coordinated efforts to avoid a repeat of 2020-style disruptions. That said, we still acknowledge that there could be lingering uncertainties for days and even weeks after Election Day. At the very least, we have been cushioned against surprise. Dismay cuts a lot deeper when it catches us unaware.