Trump demonises migrants in dark, misleading speech

Published October 13, 2024 Updated October 13, 2024 07:28am
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump clenches his fist as he leaves after speaking at a campaign rally at Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nevada.—AFP
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump clenches his fist as he leaves after speaking at a campaign rally at Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nevada.—AFP

AURORA: Donald Trump painted an apocalyptic picture of a country “occupied” by hordes of criminal foreigners in a campaign speech on Friday as he escalated his efforts to make November’s US election about a migrant crime wave that isn’t happening.

With the White House race neck-and-neck in the final stretch, the Republican ex-president has been dividing his closing pitch between a protectionist economic message and riling his largely white, working class supporters by demonising immigrants.

As his Democratic election rival Kamala Harris pledged to work with Republicans to promote united government, Trump delivered as divisive a speech as he has ever given, wildly exaggerating local tensions and misleading his audience about immigration statistics and policy.

Republican presidential candidate vows to tackle migrant gangs using the Alien Enemies Act of 1798

“America is known, all throughout the world, as ‘Occupied America.’ They call it ‘occupied.’ We’re being occupied by a criminal force,” Trump thundered, in an 80-minute appearance in Aurora, Colorado focused almost entirely on immigration.

“But to everyone here in Colorado and all across our nation, I make this pledge and vow to you: November 5, 2024 will be Liberation Day in America,” he added, flanked by posters of foreign suspected criminals.

While the US government has struggled for years to manage its southern border with Mexico, Trump has super-charged concerns by claiming an “invasion” is underway by migrants he says will rape and murder Americans.

‘Racist lies’

Aurora was the scene of a viral video showing armed Latinos rampaging through an apartment block that spurred sweeping, false narratives about the town being terrorized by Latin American migrants.

Smearing Harris as a “criminal,” the convicted felon said falsely that Venezuelan gangs in Colorado had been given permission to shoot police, and spoke darkly of an “enemy from within” that he said was a bigger threat than any foreign adversary.

Trump vowed to tackle migrant gangs using the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 — which allows the federal government to round up and deport foreigners belonging to enemy countries — as part of a mass deportation drive he christened “Operation Aurora.” Violent crime, which spiked under Trump, has fallen in every year of President Joe Biden’s administration.

Migrants commit fewer crimes proportionately than the native population, though foreign suspects have been named in a few high-profile cases of violent attacks on women and children, infuriating Republicans.

Encounters with illegal immigrants at the southern border are now about where they were in 2020, the last year of Trump’s presidency, after peaking at a record 250,000 for the month of December 2023.

Left-leaning lobby group ProgressNow Colorado rejected “Trump’s racist lies about Aurora” in a statement calling the rally “a huge strategic blunder” for his campaign.

Published in Dawn, October 13th, 2024

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