A defiant President Trump rallied with his base for
more than an hour Tuesday in Arizona, trashing the media over its
coverage of his response to the recent violence in Charlottesville, Va.,
while criticizing the state’s Republican senators for not getting
behind him.
The president also signaled during
the Phoenix rally that he could soon pardon Joe Arpaio, the former
sheriff in Maricopa County famous for his tough stance against illegal
immigration.
But Trump was most animated when defending himself
against accusations he wasn’t forceful enough in condemning the white
supremacists and racists who were protesting in Charlottesville earlier
this month. He blamed the media for distorting his comments.
At one point, the president pulled a piece of paper
out of his jacket and re-read his initial statements condemning the
racists involved the protests.
“Did they report that I said that racism is evil?” Trump asked of the media. The crowd yelled, “No!”
“You know why?” Trump asked. “Because they are very dishonest people.”
A 32-year-old counter-protester was killed in
Charlottesville after police said a Nazi sympathizer rammed his car into
a crowd. After the violence, the president faced criticism for blaming
“both sides” for the unrest instead of just white nationalists.
As Trump continued to rail against the media’s coverage of him, the crowd began chanting: “CNN sucks!”
“These are sick people," Trump said of the media.
"You know the thing I don’t understand? You would think … they’d want to
make our country great again. And I honestly believe they don’t.”
The events in Charlottesville cast a shadow over the
rally, with Phoenix’s Democratic mayor, Greg Stanton, asking Trump last
week to delay his rally in wake of the violence.
The Charlottesville violence led cities across the
country to consider removing Confederate statues, something Trump railed
against Tuesday.
“They’re trying to take away our culture, they’re trying to take away our history,” he said.
A crowd of protesters formed outside the convention
center Tuesday, but the president bragged that there were far more Trump
supporters in attendance.
“All week, they’re talking about the massive crowds that are going to be outside,” Trump said. “Where are they?”
He then mocked liberal protesters who had been demonstrating.
“You know, they show up in the helmets and the black masks and they’ve got clubs and they’ve got everything,” Trump said.
Referring to the far-left militant protest group, Trump exclaimed: “Antifa!”
Leading up to the rally, it was believed Trump could
announce a pardon at the rally for Arpaio, the former Arizona sheriff
convicted of a misdemeanor charge for not obeying a 2011 order from a
judge to stop his anti-immigrant traffic patrols. Earlier Tuesday, the
White House said the president would not be announcing a pardon at the
rally.
But Trump suggested a pardon – which would be his first as president – could be forthcoming.
“I’ll make a prediction. I think he’s going to be
just fine,” Trump said. “But I won’t do it tonight because I don’t want
to cause any controversy. Is that OK?”
Without specifically naming them, Trump dinged the
state’s two Republican senators, Jeff Flake and John McCain, with whom
he has sparred recently.
McCain, a frequent Trump critic who was recently
diagnosed with brain cancer, irked the president by voting against the
Senate’s recent plan to repeal and replace ObamaCare.
“One vote away – I will not mention any names,” Trump said of McCain.
Flake, who has battled with Trump on immigration, has
been promoting a book that argues the GOP is in “denial” about the
president.
Speaking of Flake, Trump said: “And nobody wants me
to talk about your other senator, who's weak on borders, weak on crime.
So I won’t talk about him.”
During his speech, Trump vowed to follow through on
his promise to crack down on illegal immigration. He also said he isn’t
giving up on repealing ObamaCare and expressed optimism about reforming
the country’s tax codes.
Speaking of the failed attempt to pass health care
reform legislation, Trump said: “It would’ve been great health care for
Arizona. It would have been great.”
Tuesday's rally came a day after Trump announced
plans to send more troops to Afghanistan – an announcement he
highlighted during his speech. “Did anybody watch last night?"
“Last night, as you know, I laid out my vision for an
honorable and enduring outcome in a very tough place, a place where our
country has failed, Afghanistan,” Trump said.
The president also addressed the recent escalation of
rhetoric with North Korea. Trump referenced the country’s leader and
said he believes Kim Jong Un is “starting to respect us.” Trump
expressed hope that “maybe something positive can come about.”
High-ranking administration officials and other
recognizable conservatives warmed up the crowd before the president
spoke, including Vice President Mike Pence and Housing and Urban
Development Secretary Ben Carson.
Several of them painted a picture of a divided country.
"Our lives are too short to let our differences
divide us," Carson said. "Our differences are nothing compared to our
shared humanity and the values that unite us."
Alveda King, a niece of Martin Luther King Jr., and evangelist Franklin Graham both delivered prayers before Trump’s speech.
"We come tonight as a troubled nation,” Graham said.
“We're broken spiritually, we're divided politically, we're divided
racially."