Trump has the inklings of a plan to take on Harris, but he seems unable to implement it
- Hge News
- Aug 15, 2024
- 4 min read
Donald Trump showed up in battleground North Carolina for a big speech on the economy – and one of his unhinged rallies broke out.

But amid the insults, trash talk, rage and lies, the former president blundered into the thing he’d been seeking for days: a strategy to take on Vice President Kamala Harris.
The former president took the stage Wednesday with Republican commentators pining for signs that he’d stabilized after more than three weeks of fury and disorientation after President Joe Biden pulled out of the 2024 race.
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Anyone hoping for an elusive Trump pivot would have been disappointed, as they almost always are, as he branded Harris “crazy” and “not smart,” while lampooning her laugh with sexist attacks and turning up the heat of his immigration demagoguery.
Trump’s still uncontrolled bitterness that he’s no longer running against Biden stole the headlines from a speech that his campaign billed as a serious exercise devoted to the economy – the issue that voters care about most.
But his remarks, at least the scripted version of them, offered the first signs that the Trump campaign is beginning to settle on a coherent, albeit extreme and divisive, plan to react to a new general election foe. The event, therefore, offered a preview of how the race to Election Day will unfold after the Democratic National
Convention next week.
Trump’s plan to slow Harris could end up hurting himself
The new approach, if Trump ever musters the discipline to implement it in a concentrated way, is deeply personal and designed to destroy the idea that Harris, just the second woman to head a major party presidential ticket, is competent to serve. It involves blaming her for the scourge of inflation and high grocery prices that haunted Biden’s administration, under the new title of “Kamalanomics.”
With Harris expected to lay out her own economic plan on Friday, Trump’s team also wants to frustrate any effort by the vice president to bill her candidacy as a fresh start for economic policy. Trump also stepped up efforts to paint Harris as an extreme liberal – a strategy that has sometimes worked for Republican presidential campaigns in the past – at a time when conservative media is making comparisons between her and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Trump is also portraying Harris as a flip flopper who backed away from past positions on energy and health care but who would return to what he says is her radical past if elected. It’s an attempt to shatter public trust in the new Democratic nominee and builds on his previous questioning of her identifying as a Black woman, as well as a South Asian American. In the words of Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance, Harris is a “chameleon” who changes her politics and racial identify to suit her quest for power.
The former president is also doubling down on the politics of fear, conjuring what he claims are catastrophes at home and abroad that would unfold if Harris were president – from World War III to a Great Depression. Mixing in his dystopian vision on immigration and crime, Trump is tapping into insecurity among Americans struggling to afford a decent lifestyle and who may be alarmed that US enemies like China and Russia are on the march.
But the question for Trump as Harris surges is how much he’s already hurt himself with his tantrums and false claims that Biden’s replacement on the Democratic ticket represents some kind of coup. New polls are showing just how dramatically Harris has transformed the election. The vice president has uncorked an explosion of enthusiasm in a party that was demoralized just three weeks ago.
And she’s repairing the holes in the Democratic coalition that threatened to doom Biden’s second term hopes among minority and young voters especially.
Trump’s approach, showcasing his volcanic temperament and vicious personal style, seems a strange way to win over the suburban, female and moderate voters in battleground states who have become even more critical to the result in November now that Harris has returned the race to an effective tie.
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The nastiness of Trump’s attacks may come across as deeply offensive to some female voters.
For instance, Trump on Wednesday again mocked Harris’ laugh – using it to suggest that she is unfit for the presidency. “What happened to her laugh? I haven’t heard that laugh in about a week,” he said. “That’s why they keep her off the stage,” he added, calling her laugh that “of a crazy person” and “career-threatening.”
And for most of Trump’s speech on Wednesday, he appeared to still be playing to the base voters who adore him rather than trying to appeal to a more centrist audience. Indeed, he even mocked the idea of giving a serious speech — perhaps annoyed by Republican former office holders – like former House
Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Trump’s erstwhile primary foe, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who pleaded with him to focus.
“This is a little different day, this isn’t a rally,” Trump told his crowd. “They wanted to do a speech on the economy so we are doing this as an intellectual speech. You are all intellectuals today.”
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