close
close

topicnews · September 13, 2024

Congressman reveals Trump comment “That scared me”

Congressman reveals Trump comment “That scared me”

Representative Adam Ship (D-CA), a fervent anti-Trump Democrat who supported the late Dianne FeinsteinSenate seat in November, would probably not improve anything Donald Trump said in the debate last Tuesday against Vice President Kamala Harris.

As lead prosecutor in Trump’s first impeachment trial, in which the president was found guilty of foreign interference in the 2020 election and obstruction of the U.S. Constitution, Schiff has been sharply critical of what he sees as the potential (and past) dangers of a compromised Trump and his ability to adequately represent American interests on the world stage.

[NOTE: Schiff’s warning about Trump’s weakness when it comes to global autocrats — i.e., “strongmen” — is an alarm Harris also sounded during the debate, portraying Trump as vulnerable to “flattery and favors” by foreign dictators who “can manipulate him” — a situation she claimed his own former military staff called a “disgrace.” See below.}

For all Schiff heard from Trump during the debate about the economy, immigration, abortion and other contentious issues, the Congressman wrote to constituents today to reveal a moment from Donald Trump on stage that Schiff said “scared” him.

Prefacing it by saying that, unlike the debate’s main meme, his concern “doesn’t involve eating cats and dogs,” Schiff emphasized this quote from Trump:

“Viktor Orbán, one of the most respected men, they call him a strongman, prime minister of Hungary… they said why is the whole world blowing up? Why is it blowing up? He said because ‘you need Trump as President. They were afraid of him… China was afraid of him. North Korea was afraid of him. Russia was afraid of him…’ Viktor Orbán said it. He said ‘the most respected, most feared person is Donald Trump. We had no problems when Trump was President.’”

Donald Trump, at the September debate with Kamala Harris

Schiff excoriated Trump for publicly praising Orban, describing the “ultra-conservative” Hungarian prime minister as someone “who has rolled back human rights, eviscerated their democracy, limited the freedoms of the press, and cozied up to Russia.”

[NOTE: The view of Orban as an autocratic enemy of real democracy is one that many American conservatives have ignored, but which groups like Human Rights Watch have long espoused.]

Schiff’s language in characterizing Orban is almost identical to the way he describes what Trump wants to achieve in a second term. For example, he accuses Trump of “making a pass to Putin and the Kremlin.”

Trump’s praise for Orban is a warning, says Schiff, noting that “democratic countries” – unlike the virtual dictatorships of the likes of Orban, Putin and Kim Jong-Un – “are horrified at the prospect of a second Trump presidency.”