2016 campaign takes strange twists after Orlando
Story highlights
- Trump was at the epicenter of much of the controversy
- Unusual responses this week underscore volatile nature of American politics this year
Washington (CNN)The ever-turbulent 2016 election is now just plain weird.
The
attack on an Orlando gay nightclub -- the worst strike on U.S. soil
since 9/11 -- spurred a strange week of politics even by this year's
standards.
As
always, Donald Trump was at the epicenter of much of the controversy.
The presumptive Republican nominee, who opposes same-sex marriage,
sought to portray himself as a "real friend" of the LGBT community while taking ambiguous positions on gun control that he later seemed to reverse and insinuating President Barack Obama has ulterior motives in responding to terrorism.
Hillary
Clinton, meanwhile, broke with Obama by uttering the words "radical
Islamism" -- rhetoric that she has long resisted for fear that it would
embolden terrorists.
Terrorist
attacks often have the potential to radically shift the political
conversation. Trump's proposed temporary ban on Muslim immigrants in the
aftermath of the San Bernardino, California, attacks, for instance,
deeply resonated with GOP primary voters. But the responses this week --
in which Trump and Clinton made moves that would have been unexpected a
week ago -- reflect the unusual confluence of gay rights, gun control
and national security in the wake of Orlando and underscore the volatile
nature of American politics this year.
Trump
No one is more unusual at the moment than Trump.
He
started the week by tearing up the Terrorism 101 rule book used by most
politicians who go out of their way to foster unity in the wake of such
an outrage. Trump did the exact opposite.
Hours
after Sunday's attack unfolded, he issued a self-congratulatory tweet
that noted his long stance that radical Islam leads to terrorism. On
Monday, he implied Obama was somehow complicit or sympathetic toward the
U.S.-born Muslim who went on the rampage and later snatched away the
campaign credentials of The Washington Post when it reported on his
comments.
Trump has never been
known for consistency and demonstrated his ability to hold several
contradictory positions on issues that motivate the Republican base at
the same time.
After
the Orlando carnage, Trump suggested that if the people in the
nightclub had guns themselves, the story could have been different. And
he stirred his audiences with false claims that Clinton wanted to "take
away Americans' guns."
But then,
perhaps scenting a change in the political wind, Trump said he would
meet with the National Rifle Association to discuss how to stop people
on the terror watch list or FBI no-fly lists from buying guns, in
contradiction with previous Republican positions. But during a Thursday
rally in Dallas, he again seemed to take a hard line on guns, repeating
his claim about Clinton and saying, "I'm going to save your Second
Amendment rights."
Trump repeatedly
claimed that he was the best friend the LGBT community has in this
election -- rather than Clinton who has been deeply engaged in LGBT
issues for years and counts the community as a deep well of support and
donor dollars.
Clinton could not
resist trolling her general election foe when CNN reporter Phil
Mattingly quoted Trump on Twitter as saying: "You tell me: who is better
for the gay community and who is better for women than Donald Trump."
The former secretary of state's campaign account tweeted back, "Hi."
Trump expounded further on
his gun views Friday evening. At a Texas rally Trump argued, as he often
has in the wake of terrorist attacks and mass shootings, that fewer gun
restrictions would have lessened the death toll.
"If
we had people, where the bullets were going in the opposite direction,
right smack between the eyes of this maniac," Trump said, gesturing
between his eyes. "And this son of a b---- comes out and starts shooting
and one of the people in that room happened to have (a gun) and goes
boom. You know what, that would have been a beautiful, beautiful sight,
folks."
Trump also slammed
President Barack Obama for arguing for action to change existing gun
laws in the wake of the mass shooting in Orlando.
"President
Obama is trying to make terrorism into guns and it's not guns, folks.
It is not guns, folks. It is not guns, this is terrorism," Trump said.
Role reversal
But Trump was not the only politician pulling off a role reversal toward the gay community.
Iowa
Rep. Steve King, who once warned his state could become a "gay marriage
Mecca" after its Supreme Court lifted a ban on same-sex marriage,
offered a striking shift in tone this week.
"I
think it was clear that gays were targeted in Orlando and it does
matter and it's tragic that they were targeted because of their sexual
orientation," King told CNN's Chris Cuomo on "New Day."
That was a rare moment of conciliation in what was a largely divisive political week.
In
fact, the manner in which the Orlando attack immediately became
political fodder contrasted with the numbing wave of shock that settled
over the United Kingdom, where campaigning for next week's Europe Union
referendum was put on hold after the murder of lawmaker Jo Cox.
Trump and Clinton were hardly alone in the political fray this week.
With
seven months left in his term, Obama could have left it to the newly
minted Democratic presumptive nominee to carry the fight to Trump. But
he felt a need to respond -- especially to Trump's comments.
"That's
not the America we want," he said during an extraordinarily direct
speech on Tuesday. "It doesn't reflect our democratic ideals. It will
make us less safe."
By wading so
deeply into the presidential race, Obama was offering a preview of the
kind of political assist he could provide Clinton as he hits the
campaign trail soon as a surrogate. But on Tuesday at least, Obama
completely overshadowed his preferred successor.
Capitol Hill
The normal order is also disrupted on Capitol Hill.
Republican
leaders are stuck in an uncomfortable marriage with their
can't-live-with-him, can't-live-without-him presidential nominee, who is
showing no signs of cooling the polarizing rhetoric that many GOP
elites decry.
Lawmakers normally
attracted to microphones like bees around a honey pot spent the week
fleeing in the opposite direction. House Speaker Paul Ryan endured the
latest round of questions about whether he would withdraw his recent
endorsement of Trump.
Ryan tried to explain his dilemma in an interview that will air on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday.
"I
get that this is a very strange situation. He's a very unique nominee,"
Ryan said. "But I feel as a responsibility institutionally as the
speaker of the House that I should not be leading some chasm in the
middle of our party."
Democrats have their problems too: they have a presidential candidate, Bernie Sanders, who has clearly lost the race but again this week refused to quit.
Sanders
is proving that piloting a soft landing to a political revolution is
tough. While he vowed on Thursday to help Clinton defeat Trump, he still
wants full reform of the Democratic Party and its policy platform.
Still,
there are signs that Sanders is losing his leverage, not gaining it:
even one of his closest backers, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, signaled on Friday
that the game was up.
"I think
there is a Democratic nominee at this point," Gabbard told CNN's Wolf
Blitzer, though would not go as far as endorsing Clinton.
Arizona
Sen. John McCain also felt the political heat when blasted Obama as
"directly responsible" for the mass shooting in Orlando.
Then,
like a character from a previous, more courtly political age, he had
second thoughts, and issued a statement that clarified that he meant
that the President's policies were to blame -- rather than the character
of the man who beat him for the White House eight years ago.
A
politician who admits he was wrong. In the crazed world of the 2016
presidential election circus, what could be weirder than that?
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