Trump assails women who accused him of misconduct, days before his debate with Harris
UNB
Publish: 07 Sep 2024, 12:17 PM
WASHINGTON,
Sept 7 (AP/UNB) - Shortly after appearing in court for an appeal of a decision
that found him liable for sexual abuse, Donald Trump stepped in front of
television cameras Friday and brought up a string of past allegations of other
acts of sexual misconduct, potentially reminding voters of incidents that were
little-known or forgotten.
The former president has
made hitting back at opponents and accusers a centerpiece of his political
identity, but his performance at his namesake Manhattan office tower was
startling even by Trump's combative standards.
At times, he seemed to
relish using graphic language and characterizations of the case brought by
advice columnist E. Jean Carroll, which could expose the former president to
further legal challenges from Carroll's attorneys. His remarks were especially
striking given that they came four days before Trump will debate Vice President
Kamala Harris, with early voting about to begin in some parts of the country
and Election Day just two months away.
Trump is doing his best
to stay in the public eye while Harris prepares for the debate in private,
meeting with her advisers in Pittsburgh. That's a reflection of their divergent
campaign styles, with Trump frequently engaging with reporters - albeit often
in friendly settings - while Harris has done just one interview and no news
conferences since taking President Joe Biden's place atop the Democratic
ticket.
His team had billed
Friday's appearance as a press conference and Trump repeatedly brought up
Harris' lack of news conferences. But Trump took no questions and instead
talked about the cases against him for an hour while hardly mentioning any
campaign issues.
"I'm running for
president, and I have all these cases all of a sudden come," he said.
"And they're fake cases."
Trump's campaign raised
tens of millions of dollars off his previous indictments, convictions and
appearances in court. But it's unclear how focusing on his legal woes will help
him now as he works to win over undecided voters - including independents and
those on the fence in critical swing states, ahead of a critical debate on
Tuesday that will likely draw tens of millions of viewers.
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