Trump is becoming an embarrassment to his own party
Kamala Harris in Houston addresses Trump's bonkers appearance at the NABJ: "The divisiveness and the disrespect. And let me just say. The American people deserve better … a leader who does not respond with hostility and anger when confronted with the facts." pic.twitter.com/uo7sN6NV0Z
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 1, 2024
Former President Trump’s comments about Vice President Harris to the National Association of Black Journalists are being treated as radioactive by many Republicans.
Why it matters: The tense interview is being met with GOP reactions ranging from qualified concern to outright shock, with some Republicans questioning Trump’s ability to adapt to the new Democratic ticket.
- “It was awful,” one House Republican said of the interview, telling Axios it raised concerns about whether Trump can contain his impulses while running against the first woman, Black and Asian American vice president.
- Sen Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) said of the Trump campaign: “Maybe they don’t know how to handle the campaign, and so you default to issues that just should simply not be an issue.”
- “That was not a demonstration on how to win over undecided voters,” another House Republican said.
Driving the news: Trump suggested falsely during his appearance at the NABJ’s annual convention that Harris “became a Black person” after identifying primarily as Indian.
- Interviewer Rachel Scott quickly undercut that claim by noting Harris attended Howard University, a historically Black college.
- Trump also said he would challenge Harris to a cognitive test, claiming she “failed her law exam, so maybe she wouldn’t pass a cognitive test.” Harris passed the bar exam and was the attorney general of California.
- Trump was also combative with his interviewers during the 35-minute long sit-down, calling Scott, an ABC News reporter, “very rude” and “nasty.”
What they’re saying: A handful of high-profile Republicans went on the record to chastise Trump.
- Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a GOP candidate for U.S. Senate, said in a post on X that it is “unacceptable and abhorrent to attack Vice President Harris or anyone’s racial identity,” without mentioning Trump by name.
- Murkowski rattled off a litany of what she described as “very unfortunate” recent Trumpworld missteps: “Childless cat women, DEI candidates, now, ‘Is she black? Is she Indian?'”
Yes, but: Many Republicans did not want to put their names to criticisms of Trump – who is well known to try to exact retribution against GOP critics – with others dodging questions about his comments entirely. [Continue reading…]