This 30-second video is absolutely devastating for Donald Trump
By Greg Sargent August 4 at 2:52 PM
What Donald Trump is doing on the campaign trail
View Photos
The GOP presidential nominee is out on the trail ahead of the general election in November.
John
McCain — one of the most respected voices in the Republican Party on
national security — was asked a direct question: Are you comfortable
with Donald Trump possibly having control of our nuclear arsenal?
This
should be a no-brainer, since McCain is supporting Trump for president,
a gig that includes having a measure of control over that
aforementioned nuclear arsenal.
But in answering the question,
McCain pulled a big time homina homina homina. He declined to answer,
other than to say: This is on you to figure out, American voters!
That’s
not an exaggeration in the least. Here’s video of the episode, which
was flagged for me by a Democrat, in which McCain confronted this
question in an exchange with reporters yesterday. It’s the first episode
on the video:
John McCain's up-and-down relationship with Donald Trump
Embed Share
Play Video1:58
Sen.
John McCain has repeatedly come under attack from GOP nominee Donald
Trump. Here are just a few of their rocky moments. (Peter Stevenson/The
Washington Post)
Here’s the transcript:
QUESTION: Are you comfortable with Donald Trump possibly having control of the nuclear arsenal?
McCAIN:
[Silence, followed by unintelligible stammering.] Anyone that the
people of this country choose to be the commander in chief and the
President of the United States — therefore can lead this country, and
will lead in a responsible fashion. Anyone who is elected president
fairly in this country. And that’s the way that our democratic system
works. That’s how our government works. The American people select the
next president of the United States, knowing full well what the role of
the commander in chief is. Therefore, I have the utmost respect for the
verdict of the people.
The careful listener will have noted that
McCain declined to say whether he himself would be comfortable with
Trump gaining control of the nuclear arsenal. Instead, he essentially
said that the American voters will have to take into account that
electing Donald Trump president would bring about that outcome, and
added that if the American people went ahead and chose Trump in the full
knowledge that this is what they would be doing, then he would respect
their verdict.
[Republicans nominate insane person to lead America, then panic when he proves he’s insane]
Translation: Better choose wisely, American voters! I’m not helpin’ ya on this one!
Let’s
pause to consider how devastating this one moment is — or should be —
for Trump. The 2008 Republican presidential nominee and chairman of the
Senate Armed Services Committee, a man who is widely seen as a war hero —
who has been tapped by the Sunday shows to hold forth on foreign policy
and national security issues probably hundreds of times — declined to
say whether he would be comfortable with putting Trump in charge of the
maximal destructive power of the American military.
Now, it’s
certainly possible that McCain has said elsewhere that he’d be fine with
Trump controlling our nukes, or that he’ll subsequently clarify that
he’s certain Trump is rock solid commander-in-chief material. But it’s
very easy to imagine this archetypal deer-in-the-headlights moment
featured in a Democratic ad. McCain’s visible, cringing discomfort with
the question is potentially a seminal moment in this campaign.
After
all, this comes at precisely the moment when Democrats are raising
questions about Trump’s temperamental and emotional unfitness to handle
foreign policy in a complicated world, and about his obvious lack of
knowledge or curiosity about the complexities of international affairs —
with a particular emphasis on the potential horror of allowing Trump to
control nuclear weapons. (This is a high stakes political battle, as
some polls have shown Trump with an advantage on terrorism, while others
have shown Hillary Clinton with a wide advantage on handling crises and
handling foreign policy in general.) As Clinton put it in her
convention speech, summing up the Democratic case: “A man you can bait
with a tweet is not a man we can trust with nuclear weapons.”
[Could Trump actually drop out of the race? And what would happen if he did?]
What’s
more, Democrats are trying to line up as many Republicans as possible —
see this ad from the pro-Clinton Super PAC Priorities USA as an example
— to shed light on the riskiness of putting Trump in charge of our
military machine, in order to win over GOP-leaning voters. McCain
perfectly captured this entire argument in a 30-second performance.
But
this moment also captures just how awkward supporting Trump is growing
for Republicans — and indeed how reckless it is — as his instability and
erratic behavior become more and more evident to everyone. McCain
should be a safe incumbent, but he’s facing a potentially tough
reelection fight, perhaps in part because Trump’s abusiveness and
demagoguery are alienating Latino voters (of which there are many in
Arizona) to an untold degree. Trump has repeatedly questioned the war
hero status of McCain — “I like people that weren’t captured, okay?” he
once said — which has also alarmed Republicans about Trump’s
temperament. In recent days, as Trump attacked the family of a
Muslim-American killed in combat, that alarm has escalated into
widespread GOP panic that the Republican nominee for president is now
revealing himself to be deeply, catastrophically unfit for the job.
Opinions newsletter
Thought-provoking opinions and commentary, in your inbox daily.
Now
McCain has shown he’s visibly uncomfortable with the question of
whether the man at the top of the ticket can be trusted with nukes, but
he’s voting for him anyway? That’s a hard position to sustain, both
politically and substantively.
Is there anyone who doubts that
many of the Republican leaders who are currently backing Trump would
have just as much trouble answering the nukes question as McCain did?
****************************************************************
UPDATE: Here’s video of just the key exchange in question:
McCain responds to question on Trump and the U.S. nuclear arsenal
Embed Share
Play Video0:43
Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.) answered a question on Aug. 3 about whether he
would trust Republican nominee Donald Trump with the U.S. nuclear
arsenal. (The Associated Press)
Friday, August 5, 2016
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment