Ted Cruz and Colin Allred clash over abortion, trans athletes and Jan. 6 in feisty Texas Senate debate

Ted Cruz and Colin Allred clash over abortion, trans athletes and Jan. 6 in feisty Texas Senate debate

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz and Democratic Rep. Colin Allred traded quippy one-liners and clashed over policy Tuesday at their first and only debate in a Texas Senate race debate that both candidates agree is up for grabs.

Cruz presented himself as a conservative who “will fight to keep Texas Texas,” while Allred cast Cruz as a do-nothing extremist who has not delivered for the state in his 12 years in the Senate.

“When the lights went out in the energy capital of the world, he went to Cancún. On Jan. 6, when a mob was storming the Capitol, he was hiding a supply closet. And when the toughest border security bill in a generation came up in the United States Senate, he took it down,” Allred said, repeatedly mentioning Cruz’s trip to Mexico during a 2021 winter storm in Texas. “We don’t have to have a senator like this.”

Cruz appeared bemused by Allred’s zingers.

“Congressman Allred has memorized his lines well,” he said with a grin, saying there’s “difference between words and actions.” Cruz said Allred’s “words sound good” but don’t match his voting record.

While Cruz has the advantage in Texas, a Republican stronghold, polling shows the race is close: Cruz leads by 4 points in a University of Houston poll and by 5 points in a recent Marist College poll.

Democrats control 51 Senate seats. They are all but certain to lose in deep-red West Virginia and are trailing in recent polls of Montana. If those two seats change hands to the Republican Party, Democrats will face long odds of keeping control of the chamber. Some Democrats see a tantalizing opportunity in Texas for an upset victory because of Cruz’s polarizing image.

Cruz has sounded the alarm about the race, warning that his victory isn’t assured and that he needs more resources to secure it.

Cruz went on offense over energy and blamed Democrats for inflation. He grew particularly animated when he attacked Allred on the issue of transgender athletes, saying Allred has backed measures that could lead to boys’ playing in girls’ sports.

“Congressman Allred was an NFL linebacker. It is not fair for a man to compete against women,” Cruz said.

“I don’t support boys playing girls’ sports,” Allred replied, calling it “laughable” for Cruz to present himself as “the protector of women and girls” when he “thinks it’s perfectly reasonable that if a girl is raped by a relative of hers, a victim of incest, that she should be forced to carry that child to term and give birth to it.”

Allred used his opening remarks to call himself “the most bipartisan Texan in Congress” and said he’s “the exact opposite of Sen. Cruz, the most extreme senator,” who he said is “only focused on himself.”

Allred said Cruz has sought to “transition” his image from a radical to a reasonable senator for the election while also seeking to press his advantages on health care and abortion. He vowed to support legislation that would restore the rights of Roe v. Wade.

Cruz, who is staunchly anti-abortion, didn’t directly say whether he favors exceptions for rape and incest, while he sought to soften his rhetoric on the issue and said abortion law in Texas should be “a decision that will be made by the state Legislature.” He said Democrats’ support for a sweeping abortion-rights measure without restrictions was the real extremist position in the debate.

Cruz, asked whether he’d support pardoning rioters who stormed the U.S Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, sidestepped and said he favors prosecuting criminals, also invoking “the antifa and Black Lives Matter riots that burned cities across this country.”

Allred, looking directly at Cruz as he criticized his objections to certifying the 2020 election, said: “You’re a threat to democracy.”




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Colin Allred, Ted Cruz do battle in Texas Senate debate

Colin Allred, Ted Cruz do battle in Texas Senate debate



U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, speaks during a debate for the U.S. Senate with U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, D-Dallas, hosted by WFAA on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024, in Dallas, Texas.

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U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, D-Dallas, speaks during a debate for the U.S. Senate with U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, hosted by WFAA on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024, in Dallas, Texas.


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Ireland: SNL sues ABC for theft of debate script | Opinion







Picking a column topic isn’t always easy. And sometimes it’s too easy.

Meow.

I hadn’t planned to write about the ABC News debate between “Dr. Demento” and Vice President Kamala Harris. Campaign coverage is an easy piece to write and until about seven minutes into the broadcast, I was leaning toward a serious subject.

All that changed when the former “liar in chief” went astray chasing cats as if someone had pointed a laser dot on the stage and the former president couldn’t help himself from pouncing. It all started with what should have been a boring exchange about an immigration bill that he killed so he could beat up on the Democrats over immigration.

Instead of engaging in a stiff exchange on policy technicalities on the order of the ultra-dull exchange between Nixon and JFK at the first-ever televised debate 64 years ago over the defense of Quemoy (Kinmen) and Matsu in the Taiwan Strait, the dumpster fire was lit when Harris noted his rally goers were bored with his pitch and walking out in the middle of his ramblings.

The response to his you-wouldn’t-believe-how-big rallies being belittled: “In Springfield (Ohio), they’re (Haitian immigrants) eating the dogs. The people that came in. They’re eating the cats. They’re eating — they’re eating the pets of the people that live there. And this is what’s happening in our country.”

Seriously. Very seriously. And hilarious at the same time unless you’re a legally admitted refugee from the gang terror in Haiti where a drug lord serendipitously named Barbecue is in command and running the place like a never-ending “Red Wedding” episode and spinoff series from “Game of Thrones.”

Democrats who, as a rule, shun the politics of the mentally unfit, can’t post enough satirical food memes about cat-a-lonie, catburger helper, DoorDash deliveries of fresh kitten and an actual wiener dog AI’d into a hot dog bun.  Not to be out-memed, Taylor Swift, a “childless cat lady” with 280 million followers, counter-pounced with a picture of her cuddling her cat and endorsing Kamala Harris.

Fox News was keeping tabs (or tabbies) on their boy’s reaction. “She will probably pay a price for that in the marketplace,” Trump predicted, as if Ms. Swift were a Bud Light can that would be crushed by rednecks refusing to look her way.

The first law of holes in debate training is this: when you’re in one, stop digging, put down the shovel and change the subject. But, nooo. The next night our own spray-tanned, marmalade candidate was in Arizona doubling down on the “truth” of his claim: “But the people on television say their dog was eaten by the people that went there.” Seems someone’s been doing his own research. “The people who went there” were legal and not coincidentally, Black immigrants to Springfield, Ohio — meaning the “people on television” undoubtedly worked for Fox News.

Catman had a Plan B for the debate for anyone not distracted by the pet-eating aliens of Ohio — putting an end to post-birth abortions of live children, what most of us and 50 state legislatures think of as infanticide. “In other words, we’ll execute the baby,” he said of a certain Democratic governor’s support of abortion rights.

The displacement of Saturday Night Live skit writers with a former president’s whacky dialogue begs for a sequel but the self-styled champion debater —  who “won 98-2” according to his polling — is not up for it. Too bad. The kittycat controversy overshadowed other material that needs further development. His continued insistence that the Jan. 6 insurrection was peaceful; that he really won the 2020 election decisively; and the fake video of his bored rallygoers yawning their way out of arenas are skits that could take on nine lives of their own.

Sadly, this outbreak of dark humor still has a very dark, Swiftian side not seen since the Irish baby lampshade satire. One of my favorite charities, HaitiChildren, doesn’t have time to laugh about the demonized immigrants and orphans that they helped to flee from the drug thugs. And Springfield city officials had to evacuate city hall after a bomb threat from a local resident who was “frustrated with immigration.”

Even the always hilarious Ted Cruz weighed in with a cat meme asking us to vote for Trump so that “Haitian immigrants don’t eat us.”

But all of this demented rambling probably won’t shake up the presidential contest. There is no sign that the Republicans are sending JD Vance to the bullpen to warm up as a replacement candidate. Vance was busy attacking childless cat ladies whom he calls mentally deranged, psychotic and responsible for low birth rates that have “made many elites sociopaths.”

Confronted with a lame debate performance, Joe Biden stepped aside. Given a similarly poor and more malicious performance, the marmalade makeup man insists his Bizzaro Saturday Night Live screenplay is the reality.

We’ll find out in November if what we have known as reality is just a myth to be rewritten as a tragicomedy.


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Trump Media shares plunge after Harris debate

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump walks away during a commercial break as US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris take notes during a presidential debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on September 10, 2024. 

Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

The share price of Trump Media plunged more than 10% on Wednesday, a day after majority shareholder Donald Trump gave a widely panned presidential debate performance against Vice President Kamala Harris.

The company’s stock price closed at its lowest level since the Truth Social app owner began publicly trading as DJT on the Nasdaq in late March.

Investing in Trump Media stock is often seen as a way to bet on the political fortunes of Trump, the former president and current Republican nominee.

Trump Media has said its business hinges at least partly on Trump’s popularity, and analysts say the company’s value will rise or fall based on his electoral prospects.

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Trump Media (DJT) Share Price

The stock drop Wednesday could signal that some Trump’s supporters were not pleased with what they saw at Tuesday night’s debate in Philadelphia.

Liberal and conservative political commentators said Harris appeared more prepared, articulate and even-keeled than Trump, who repeatedly bit on bait that she tossed to throw him off topic.

Harris’ team, projecting confidence, challenged Trump to another debate right after the first one ended.

Trump said he may not agree to that. In a Truth Social post Wednesday, he repeated his claim that Harris only wanted another debate because she was “beaten badly.”

“Why would I do a Rematch?” he wrote in the post.

Trump Media had surged as much as 10% during trading Tuesday, possibly indicating optimism about how Trump would fare in the debate.

The company’s gains on Monday and Tuesday were a respite from a weekslong rout that saw the stock price sink as much as 75% from its intraday high in late March, when then-privately held Trump Media merged with a blank-check firm.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

The slump coincided with President Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race and endorsing Harris to replace him at the top of the Democratic ticket.

It also came in the run-up to the date when Trump and other company insiders can start selling their shares.

Trump owns nearly 57% of the company’s stock. That stake at Wednesday’s closing price was worth about $1.9 billion.

It is unclear if Trump plans to start selling off his stake when a lock-up agreement lifts on Sept. 19.

Correction: Donald Trump owns nearly 57% of Trump Media’s stock. An earlier version misstated the percentage.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO


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Fox News Proposes 2nd Harris-Trump Debate in October

Fox News has offered to host a second presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump in October, the television network confirmed on Sept. 10.

The network sent a letter to the Harris and Trump campaigns offering to host a 90-minute debate moderated by anchors Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum, stating that they would be the best choices for the proposed event, Fox News reported.

The offer from Fox News was announced just moments after Harris and Trump wrapped up their first presidential debate on Sept. 10 in Philadelphia.

During that debate, broadcast by ABC News, the Republican and Democratic nominees repeatedly clashed as they addressed key issues such as the economy, energy, abortion, immigration, and foreign policy, including the war in Ukraine.

“Now that the first debate is underway between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris, FOX News Media is re-upping its proposal,” FOX News Media’s President Jay Wallace and Vice President of Politics Jessica Loker wrote in the letter, according to the publication.

“As the Harris Campaign has stated, the American people will have another opportunity to see both on stage in October,” the letter continued.

Wallace and Loker proposed three potential dates and locations for the debate: Oct. 9 in Arizona, Oct. 15 in Georgia, and Oct. 16 in North Carolina.

Fox News had previously proposed in May to host a debate between Trump and Harris, sending letters out to both campaigns.

While Trump had agreed to that debate, Harris said both she and her Republican rival had already agreed to the ABC News debate.

Within moments of Tuesday’s debate concluding, Harris’s campaign chair, Jen O’Malley Dillon, said that the vice president was ready for a second debate.

Harris Wants a Rematch: Trump

Speaking to Fox News in an interview after the debate, Trump said it was “our best debate ever” and would think about a second debate with Harris.

Trump also said Harris is pushing for a second debate because she lost and “wants a rematch.”

Asked by Fox News host Sean Hannity if he would be inclined to face off with Harris again, Trump said, “Maybe if it was on a fair network, I would do that.”

In their letter, Wallace and Loker said candidates would stand behind podiums without any props or prewritten notes, and a coin flip would determine podium placement and the order of closing statements if the network hosted the second debate.

“In recognition of FOX News Media’s capabilities and reputation, we cordially extend an invitation to all concerned parties to discuss our proposal,” they concluded. “We appreciate your consideration and look forward to the opportunity to foster informed political dialogue at this pivotal moment for our nation.”

The Epoch Times contacted a spokesperson for the Harris and Trump campaigns for further comment.

From The Epoch Times


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Donald Trump Stock Market Sentiment Indicator Signals He Lost The Presidential Debate

Shares of Truth Social-parent Trump Media & Technology (DJT) cratered Wednesday following Tuesday’s presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. That signals investor sentiment that Trump underperformed in the televised contest between the two candidates. DJT stock continued to decline Thursday.





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Pundit consensus gave the edge in the ABC-hosted presidential debate to Harris and the downward move by Trump stock DJT Wednesday appears to support that sentiment. The Trump-Harris debate Tuesday didn’t cover tax policy, perhaps the issue of most importance to financial markets.

The Donald Trump stock sank 10.5% to 16.68, falling as low as 15.30, Wednesday, hitting a new post-SPAC low. Trump Media shares on Thursday added to their slide, dropping 4.6% to 16.08 during market action.

The Trump stock often trades as a sentiment indicator toward the former president and his current candidacy.

Prior to the presidential debate Tuesday night, DJT shares gained nearly 9% this week, closing on Tuesday at 18.63.

The Donald Trump brand and the value of DJT stock are closely related, as Truth Social launched after then-Twitter shut down Trump’s account following the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

The former president holds a 65% stake in Trump Media, worth several billion dollars based on the current stock price.

The company reported in August another quarter of sub-$1 million revenue. Meanwhile, Trump also made his return to X, formerly Twitter, on Aug. 12 with a conversation with Elon Musk. Prior To Wednesday action, DJT shares tumbled 25% since then as Trump has repeatedly posted on the social media site since then. The former president had previously sworn he would not return to X and would remain on Truth Social.

Donald Trump Stock On The Decline

Trump Media jumped more than 16% on March 26, its first day trading under the DJT ticker, hitting a high of 79.38 intraday. This followed Digital World Acquisition becoming Trump Media & Technology Group after successfully merging with Trump’s tech and social-media platform on March 22. The special purpose acquisition company stock had rallied 35% on the day before the change to “DJT.”

DWAC took Trump Media and Technology Group, or TMTG, public in a reverse merger. After a prolonged battle, DWAC stockholders voted in favor of the special purpose acquisition company’s merger with TMTG. Trump Media is the parent of the conservative social-media platform Truth Social.

DJT shares have now dropped about 70% since their conversion. In 2024, DJT/DWAC has declined around 4%.

DJT shares hit a short-term high of 46.27 on July 15 following the Trump assassination attempt. Trump’s lead in the polls peaked soon after, with President Joe Biden dropping out of the 2024 race.

Since hitting that high on July 15, the Trump stock has fallen 64%.

Please follow Kit Norton on X @KitNorton for more coverage.

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Right-wing influencer spreads false claim Kamala Harris wore earpiece during debate

False claims that Vice President Kamala Harris wore clip-on audio headphones disguised as pearl earrings circulated on social media following Tuesday night’s  presidential debate, promoted by prominent accounts on X and other platforms. 

Social media users, including conspiracy theorist and far-right activist Laura Loomer, claimed Harris’s earrings were Nova H1 audio earphones, which are styled to look like pearl earrings. Loomer’s post received more than 1.3 million views by Wednesday morning. 

However, the earphones do not look the same as Harris’s earrings. A photograph from the original product review shows the Nova H1 earphones wrap around the earlobe, whereas Harris’s earrings dangle and are for pierced earlobes. 

The earrings Harris wore appear to be a pair of Tiffany & Co. South Sea Pearl Earrings from the Hardwear collection. Harris has worn the gold earrings at previous events, including during an Aug. 6 rally in Pennsylvania and the White House Juneteenth concert this summer.

US-VOTE-POLITICS-DEBATE-HARRIS-TRUMP
Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris gestures as former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a presidential debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Sept. 10, 2024.

SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty


Earpieces are not permitted in presidential debates. In the ABC debate, candidates were not allowed to bring notes or props on stage. CBS News reached out to the Harris campaign about the claims. 

Google data showed searches for “nova h1” and “nova earrings” spiked on Wednesday morning. The earrings are billed on a Kickstarter campaign as “the first clip-on earphones on the planet,” and their creators say the technology is embedded in real pearls, placed on the earlobe to project sound into the ear canal with integrated high-end microphones. 

A history of earpiece claims 

The claim that Trump’s opponent was wearing an earpiece has been repeated after several presidential debates. Social media users claimed, without evidence, that President Biden was wearing an earpiece when he debated Trump in the NBC presidential debate in June. 

In 2020, Trump’s campaign ran Facebook ads accusing Mr. Biden of wearing an earpiece during the Sept. 2020 debate, and the claims were also widely shared on social media. The Biden campaign rejected the claims, and high quality images from the debate showed the alleged wires were likely creases in his clothing and a watch or rosary. 

In 2016, the conspiracy website True Pundit and others falsely claimed Hillary Clinton was wearing an earpiece to get “stealth communications” during an NBC News forum. Fact checkers found these claims to be false.

The claims are not necessarily limited to right-wing conspiracies. In 2004, the internet was rife with rumors that a rectangular bulge between then-President George W. Bush’s shoulder was a radio receiver to strategist Karl Rove. A campaign spokesperson told The New York Times later that it was “most likely a rumpling of that portion of his suit jacket, or a wrinkle in the fabric.” 


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Trump and Harris agree to debate on Sept. 10, ABC says

PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Donald Trump recommitted to debating Vice President Kamala Harris after recently backing out, holding a lengthy news conference Thursday in which he taunted his new rival, boasted of his crowd on Jan. 6, 2021, and lashed out at questions about the enthusiasm her campaign has been generating.

As the Republican presidential nominee addressed reporters at his Palm Beach, Florida, estate, ABC announced that Trump and Harris, the Democratic nominee, have agreed to a Sept. 10 debate, setting up a widely anticipated faceoff in an already unparalleled election. Trump said he had proposed three debates with three television networks in September.

Trump again wrongly insisted there had been a “peaceful transfer” of power in 2021 and renewed attacks on Republican rivals like Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, whom Trump has harshly criticized since Kemp refused to go along with his false theories of election fraud.

In taking questions from reporters for more than an hour, Trump tried to draw a contrast with Harris, who has not held a news conference since President Joe Biden’s withdrawal from the race.

Another key moment in the election is set

Trump’s decision to go on ABC sets up a high-stakes moment in an election where Biden’s catastrophic performance in the last debate set in motion his withdrawal.

Just five days earlier, he had declared he would not debate on ABC and said his agreement with the network had been “terminated.” He wrote on his social media site that if Harris wouldn’t appear on Fox News on Sept. 4 instead, “I won’t see her at all.”

On Thursday, he announced a change of heart — and tried to pressure Harris to agree to two more September debates on Fox and on NBC.

Asked what he will do if a Harris only agrees to the ABC debate, he said: “I don’t know how that’s gonna work out. We’d like to do three debates. We think we should do three debates.”

A few hours after the news conference, Harris told reporters she was “glad he has finally committed” to debate her on ABC on Sept. 10, the date that had originally been set for a Biden faceoff against Trump and which her campaign has long stuck to.

“I’m looking forward to it and hope he shows up,” she said.

Thursday’s event was Trump’s first public appearance since Harris selected Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate. Trump called Walz a “radical left man.”

“Between her and him, there’s never been anything like this,” Trump said. “There’s certainly never been anybody so liberal like these two.”

He repeatedly suggested Harris was not intelligent enough to debate him. Harris, for her part, has tried to goad Trump into debating and told an audience in Atlanta recently that if he had anything to say about her, he should ” say it to my face.”

Trump grew visibly perturbed when pressed on Harris’ crowds and newfound Democratic enthusiasm, dismissing a question about his lighter campaign schedule as “stupid.”

Trump says he has not “recalibrated” his campaign despite facing a new opponent, a dynamic some Republican strategists have quietly complained about.

When asked what assets Harris possessed, Trump said: “She’s a woman. She represents certain groups of people.”

What to know about the 2024 Election

Trump has repeatedly — and falsely — accused Harris, the daughter of Jamaican and Indian immigrants, of previously downplaying that she is Black.

Trump acknowledges weakness with Black women

Trump recognized some changing patterns with his new opponent, acknowledging he may not be as popular with Black women, one of Democrats’ key voting blocs. He expressed a lot of confidence in his support from Black men.

“It could be I’ll be affected somewhat with Black females but we’re really doing well,” he said. “And I think ultimately they’ll like me better because I’m going to give them security, safety and jobs. I’m going to give them a good economy.”

Trump campaign officials told reporters ahead of the news conference they believe Harris is currently enjoying a honeymoon period.

They argued the fundamentals of the race have not changed and the mood of the country remains sour, with Americans frustrated by the state of the economy, the administration and the country’s directions. They say that while Harris has energized the Democratic base, she will not be able to win over Republicans or convert independents or the persuadable voters they are focused on targeting.

Trump’s campaign plans to spend the next three months hammering Harris as “failed, weak and dangerously liberal,” blaming her for every one of the the Biden administration’s unpopular policies and mocking her mannerisms and speaking style.

Trump takes questions about abortion

Trump suggested abortion will not be a major issue in the campaign and the outcome in November.

He insisted that the matter “has become much less of an issue” since the Supreme Court ended the federal constitutional right to abortion services and returned control of the matter to state governments. But the issue is widely seen as a general election liability, and Trump named states such as Ohio and Kansas that have since voted to protect abortion rights.

Trump also said he expected Florida “will go in a little more liberal way than people thought” when it votes to repeal an abortion ban later this year, but he did not respond to questions asking how he would vote.

Trump argued that Democrats, Republicans and “everybody” are pleased with the results of the 2022 ruling that overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.

Trump’s actions within the GOP, however, suggest he knows that Democrats already have capitalized on Republican opposition to abortion rights and could do so again this fall. Trump single-handedly ensured that the Republican Party platform adopted at the 2024 convention in Milwaukee does not call for a national ban on abortion, and he has said repeatedly that hardliners in the party could cost the GOP in November.

The court’s decision, issued months ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, is widely cited as a reason that Democrats fared much better than expected in House and Senate contests. And Democrats have hammered Trump in paid advertisements blaming him and the justices he appointed for ending Roe.

Trump again makes false claims on Jan. 6

Trump falsely claimed during the press conference that “nobody was killed on Jan. 6,” the date in 2021 when pro-Trump rioters breached the U.S. Capitol amid Congress’ effort to certify Biden’s 2020 election victory after Trump refused to concede.

Ashli Babbitt, a 35-year-old Air Force veteran from San Diego was shot and killed by a police officer as she climbed through a broken part of a Capitol door during the violent riot that breached the building.

To be sure, Trump has often cited Babbitt’s death while lamenting the treatment of those who first attended a rally outside the White House that day, then marched to the Capitol, many of whom fought with police and entered the building.

“I think those people were treated very badly. When you compare it to other things that took place in this country where a lot of people were killed,” Trump said Thursday.

He also falsely claimed more people attended his speech at a “Stop the Steal” rally before the riot than the famous March on Washington in 1963, the iconic event at which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his “I Have a Dream” speech.

Trump was asked about Biden’s comments in a CBS interview that he was “not confident” there would be a peaceful transfer of power if Trump were to lose.

“He should have brought this up at the debate if he had a problem. Of course there’ll be a peaceful transfer, and there was last time.”

While Biden was inaugurated on schedule, Washington was on lockdown that day, with the streets patrolled by military personnel and domestic police two weeks after Trump’s supporters had attacked the Capitol. ___

Associated Press writers Will Weissert in Washington and Darlene Superville in Romulus, Mich. contributed to this report.




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