Trump, at Louisiana rally, hits 'disgraceful' whistleblower's attorney who tweeted of 'coup' in 2017
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President Trump, at a campaign rally in Louisiana Wednesday night, unloaded on whistleblower attorney Mark Zaid, after a Fox News article from earlier in the day revealed that Zaid had tweeted about the beginning of a "coup" against the president back in 2017.
The president extensively quoted from the article, which reported that Zaid has long called for Trump's impeachment -- even promising two years ago, "We will get rid of him."
Zaid
now represents the intelligence community whistleblower who is at the
center of Democrats' impeachment inquiry against the president. The
whistleblower has alleged that, earlier this year, Trump improperly
threatened to withhold aid to Ukraine for political reasons.
"Democrats must be accountable for their hoaxes and their crimes," Trump said, holding a printout of the Fox News piece.
"I
don't know if you saw, I'm just coming off the plane, and they hand me
-- look at this character. They just hand me this story, ''Coup has started,' whistleblower attorney said in 2017.'"
Trump
added: "That was a long time ago. It's all a hoax. They say, January
2017 -- a 'coup has started,' and the 'impeachment will follow
ultimately.' It's all a hoax. It's a scam. And, you know who helps them?
These people back here -- the media."
Calling Zaid a "sleazeball," Trump further noted that Zaid had declared CNN would play a role in impeaching Trump.
Fox News reported hours before the rally that in July 2017, Zaid tweeted, "I predict @CNN will play a key role in @realDonaldTrump not finishing out his full term as president."
And,
amid a slew of impeachment-related posts, Zaid assured his Twitter
followers that "as one falls, two more will take their place,"
apparently referring to Trump administration employees defying the White
House.
Zaid asserted in his social media posts that the "coup" would occur in "many steps."
"Can
you believe this?" Trump asked. "Just came out. It's a disgrace. These
people are bad people. They rip the guts out of our country."
Trump
also hammered The Washington Post, saying, "19 minutes after I took the
oath of office, the horrible, disgusting Washington Post -- which is a
terrible paper -- an article comes out, 'The campaign to impeach President Trump has begun.'"
With
the stars of the reality television show "Duck Dynasty" in attendance,
Trump was in the northern Louisiana city of Monroe boosting Republican
businessman Eddie Rispone in his effort to keep Democrat John Bel
Edwards from a second term as governor in a crimson state Trump won by
20 percentage points. Early voting ends Saturday in the Nov. 16
election, which will mark the last governor's race of the year.
"If
you're pro-God and pro-America and pro-gun and pro-duck hunting, that's
all I want," Phil Robertson, one of the "Duck Dynasty" stars, said at
the microphone.
"You're going out to replace a radical liberal
Democrat as your governor," Trump said as the crowd booed. "John Bel
Edwards has not done the job."
But, the president and other
speakers at the rally also placed heavy emphasis on the upcoming 2020
election. Louisiana GOP Sen. John Kennedy, after praising Trump's time
in the White House as a boon to the country, colorfully accused
Democrats of trying to distract from the administration's successes.
"Speaker Nancy Pelosi is trying to impeach him," Kennedy said. "I don't mean any disrespect, but it must suck to be that dumb."
At
one point, the president identified an 8-year-old in the crowd and said
the child probably knew more about the energy industry than Hunter
Biden did.
Willie Robertson, left, of the reality TV series Duck Dynasty,
addressing the crowd the campaign rally for President Trump in Monroe,
La., on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
The younger Biden routinely obtained lucrative jobs,
including with Ukrainian natural gas company Burisma Holdings, while
his father handled relevant policy as a senator and, later, vice
president.
The president went on to tout his accomplishments in
office, including record-low unemployment numbers and the killing of
ISIS' leader, before turning to a critique of Hillary Clinton.
"Is
there any place you would rather be than a Trump rally, on a beautiful
evening in Louisiana?" Trump asked, as the crowd chanted, "Lock her up,"
and cheered. "Would you rather be at LSU vs. Alabama, or a Trump
rally?"
"I'm gonna take one more liberty," Rispone told attendees later in the evening. "Go Tigers! Beat 'Bama!"
Phil Robertson, second from right, with wife Marsha "Miss Kay"
Robertson, third right, before the start of the rally. (AP Photo/Gerald
Herbert)
Over a thousand people were gathered outside the
Monroe Civic Center early Wednesday morning, and over 40,000 people
obtained tickets for the event. However, tickets have not guaranteed
entry to Trump's rallies, and the arena would hold up to 10,000 people.
At
the rally, Trump announced he would be back in Louisiana on Thursday
for another rally at the CenturyLink Center in Bossier City.
Some
members of the NAACP Monroe/Ouachita Parish Branch were protesting
Trump's arrival just outside of the arena, the Monroe Star reported. Echoing the chants at a recent rally hosted by Bernie Sanders and Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., the demonstrators also yelled, "Lock him up."
But, pro-Trump enthusiasm was largely high among attendees in a festival-like atmosphere.
"He's
the best president we've had in quite a long time," Darlene Smith of
Mississippi told the paper. "He's in it for the people. He's not in it
for the money. He's not getting paid."
An
endorsement video circulated by the state GOP showed Trump describing
Rispone as "a fantastic man, a great success. Everything he's touched
has turned to gold." The president, who also has planned a Nov. 14 rally
in Bossier City for Rispone, called Edwards "a disaster."
Republicans
have aimed to reclaim the governorship in a Deep South state where
they've claimed Edwards won in a 2015 fluke election against a flawed
candidate beset by a prostitution scandal. Democrats have said securing a
second Edwards victory could demonstrate competitiveness in states
where the party rarely has achieved a statewide office.
A GOP loss
could raise questions about the strength of Trump's political
coattails, but not necessarily his reelection chances, particularly
since Louisiana is expected to back the president for reelection in
2020.
Trump was visiting the heart of the congressional district
represented by Republican Ralph Abraham, the third-place finisher in the
gubernatorial primary. Both Rispone and Edwards have been competing for
Abraham's voters. Polls showed a tight race, with few undecided voters
and both campaigns hoping Trump will mobilize their bases.
"Most
people have made up their mind. This is essentially a tie race at this
point. It's who gets out the vote," Rispone told a Republican women's
luncheon Tuesday.
A longtime Republican political donor who has
poured millions of his own money into the campaign, Rispone has tied his
candidacy to Trump, introducing himself to voters in TV ads by talking
about his support for the president.
The
owner of an industrial contracting firm, Rispone has avoided many
specifics about what he would do in office. Rispone's campaign strategy
has involved panning Edwards as a "liberal, tax-and-spend, career
politician and trial lawyer" and nationalizing the race. He regularly
has compared himself to Trump, declaring both were "conservative
outsiders."
Edwards, a former state lawmaker and military veteran,
has downplayed national issues in favor of a defense of his own
performance. He's reminded voters about his Medicaid expansion program
that dropped Louisiana's uninsured rate below the national average and
his work on a bipartisan tax deal that ended years of budget
instability.
Both anti-abortion and pro-gun, Edwards in many ways
hasn't matched the platform of the national Democrats, but he holds
positions that helped him draw support in 2015 from the Republican and
independent voters he'd need to win again.
Eddie Rispone, speaking with supporters at in Lake Charles, La., on Monday. (Rick Hickman/American Press via AP)
Even as Trump has campaigned against him, Edwards has
sidestepped criticism of the president, describing a good working
relationship with the White House.
"The president is doing what
his party expects him to do. When it was time for governing, he invited
me to the White House nine times," Edwards said.
He
called Trump's criticism "general talking points" he's used no matter
the state or candidate. He noted, for example, that the president
claimed Edwards threatened Second Amendment rights — but Edwards, Trump
and Rispone haven't differed much in their positions on guns.
At a
campaign stop Wednesday in Monroe, Edwards pointed to the Kentucky
governor's race, where results showed Democrat Andy Beshear in the lead
by a few thousand votes over Republican Gov. Matt Bevin, a Trump ally.
Edwards said Kentucky voters didn't cast their ballots based on Trump's
visits, and he expected Louisiana voters wouldn't either. Trump had
joined Bevin at a Kentucky rally hours before Tuesday's vote.
Eddie Rispone, left, and John Bel Edwards shaking hands before a
debate last week in Baton Rouge. (Hilary Scheinuk/The Advocate via AP)
"The people of Louisiana, like the people of
Kentucky, they will decide this race based on Louisiana issues, not
Washington, D.C. issues," Edwards said.
Ahead of Wednesday's
rally, Rispone blamed Edwards for anti-Trump radio ads recently released
by a New Orleans organization. One ad linked the president and Rispone
to white supremacist David Duke and encourage minority voters to "vote
against hatred" by choosing Edwards. Rispone called it fearmongering.
Edwards said he had nothing to do with the advertising.
Trump's
visit came a day after historic elections in Mississippi and Kentucky.
The gubernatorial race in Kentucky has remained too close to call, while
Republicans decisively held onto the governorship in Mississippi and
elected Kentucky’s first black attorney general.
Democrats, meanwhile, took complete control over the Virginia statehouse for the first time in 26 years. Fox News' Alex Pappas and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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