In her speech accepting the Democratic nomination for president, Vice President Kamala Harris addressed her opponent, former President Donald Trump – not with scorn or outright condemnation but, as columnist Peter Nicholas put it, by taking a “cheekier tone.”
“In many ways, Donald Trump is an unserious man,” Harris said, adding: “but the consequences of putting Donald Trump back in the White House are extremely serious.”
In Trump’s first term, Harris implied, there were adults in the room to serve the Constitution and protect America from the president’s worst impulses. But those adults abandoned Trump because of his contempt for both the Constitution and the country.
“Just imagine Donald Trump with no guardrails,” Harris said, “and how he would use the immense powers of the presidency of the United States. Not to improve your life, not to strengthen our national security, but to serve the only client he has ever had: himself.”
Harris’s convention jab at Trump was the most prominent example of her campaign’s strategy of attacking Trump by dismissing him not as an existential threat to democracy – although his critics continue to use that line of attack – but as “a bumbling, cartoonish figure who’s not so much fearsome as he is laughable,” as Nicholas put it.
Trump’s running mate, U.S. Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, appears no more serious than Trump, warning Americans of the existential threat of “childless cat ladies.”
Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, described the GOP ticket as “just weird.”
Walz later elaborated in a speech by calling Trump and Vance “weird and creepy as hell,” garnering laughter and applause.
Hillary Clinton, who lost the 2016 presidential election to Trump, added: “If Republican leaders don’t enjoy being called weird, creepy and controlling, they could try not being weird, creepy and controlling.”
Is ridicule Trump’s Achilles’ heel?
The Democrats have discovered and exploited what Michael Tomasky, writing in The New Republic, said in August 2024: Ridicule is Trump’s Achilles’ heel.
Trump has no one to blame but himself for people kicking him in the rear. He was, after all, the one who put the “kick me” sign there.
Long before Harris took the convention stage, other Democratic speakers were openly mocking Trump, perhaps none more effectively than former first lady Michelle Obama.
Obama, perhaps knowing that the best way to make an ass out of someone is to quote him directly, responded to Trump’s statement that immigrants were taking what he called “Black jobs.” She reminded Trump that both his predecessor in the White House and his Democratic opponent are Black.
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