Donald Trump uses violent language to suggest prominent critic Liz Cheney should have guns 'trained on her face'
There is no love lost between former GOP congresswoman Liz Cheney and Donald Trump.
In short:
Donald Trump made comments about Liz Cheney at a town hall in Arizona.
Trump's statements about women have been criticised as "inappropriate".
What's next?
Trump and Kamala Harris continue a busy campaign scheduled ahead of Tuesday's vote.
Donald Trump has suggested that former GOP congresswoman Liz Cheney should be put in front of a line of rifles, as the Republican nominee's rhetoric draws increasing criticisms ahead of Tuesday's presidential election.
Trump used a town hall event with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson in Arizona on Thursday night to attack one of his most outspoken critics in his own party.
He said Cheney — the daughter of former vice-president Dick Cheney — was a war hawk and "very dumb".
"Let's put her with a rifle standing there with nine barrels shooting at her, OK?" Trump said at the event in Glendale.
"Let's see how she feels about it, you know, when the guns are trained on her face."
Trump had been railing about politicians escalating armed conflicts, or starting new ones, "when they're sitting in Washington in a nice building".
On Friday morning, Cheney took to social media to describe the former president as a "vindictive, cruel and unstable man".
"This is how dictators destroy free nations," she wrote on X.
"They threaten those who speak against them with death. We cannot entrust our country and our freedom to a petty, vindictive, cruel, unstable man who wants to be a tyrant."
Cheney, who was a congresswoman for Wyoming between 2017 and 2023 and served as chair of the House Republican Conference, has been a prominent Trump critic, endorsing his rival Kamala Harris and even campaigning for the Democratic nominee.
Cheney has given stump speeches in support of Harris in several locations where there are concentrations of suburban GOP women on electoral rolls.
Multiple polls have pointed to Harris as being more popular among women voters, and analysts argue Cheney is trying to exploit the gender divide to make sure Trump does not return to the White House.
Trump is often criticised for his statements about women — made over decades in both public and private settings — which have been described as everything from "inappropriate" to "highly offensive" and "unhinged".
At a campaign event this week in Green Bay, Wisconsin, the 78-year-old said he was determined to protect women, "whether they like it or not".
He was last year found guilty in a civil case of sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s, in a lawsuit he claimed had been a "scam".
Speaking on CNN, Tom Corbett, a former Republican governor in the critical swing state of Pennsylvania, also denounced Trump's comments about Cheney, saying they'd "shocked" him.
"When you see actions like that, you certainly have to question the ability of someone to function in the role of president," Corbett said.
Trump supporters Kathy, Kim, Sandra and Angelina were not concerned about the former president's remarks.
However, in another key battleground — Michigan — Trump's supporters backed the Republican nominee's comments, as they queued to hear him speak at a campaign rally in Warren, just outside Detroit, on Friday.
Kim, from Detroit's suburbs, said the media had taken the remarks out of context.
"They've changed all the things he said they turned it around. He said how would she like it if guns were pointed at her," she said.
"He doesn't want to send people to war is what he's saying that's all it was but then the left-wing media is taking it out of context as they always do."
Her friend Sandra, who's attended multiple Trump rallies, agreed, saying the media was "up to its old tricks".
Clarissa, a Trump supporter, said she found the Republican nominee's approach to politics refreshing.
Kate, who'd been waiting in line for the rally for over four hours, said Cheney was out of touch.
"Liz Cheney, is an incompetent former congresswoman and she has what I call Trump derangement syndrome. She'd be less inclined to be always for wars if she wasn't so insulated from it a so if she was in a war zone herself she wouldn't likely support them," she said.
"He has never said he wanted to eliminate his enemies. When we said lock Hillary up that was just a saying and she was not locked up. He wants to have a fair system for all Americans."
Clarissa from downtown Detroit and a regular Trump rally attendee, said she liked the former president because "he just says what he feels".
Michigan, which has 15 electoral college votes, is considered a critical battleground state.
Jod Biden flipped it for the Democrats in 2020 when he won the presidency, after Trump had turned it red in 2016.
The latest Trump-Cheney scrap came as the Democrats aired a new television ad, narrated by Julia Roberts, which depicts a woman "secretly" voting for Harris, against the advice of her husband.
The ad points out the ballots are confidential and that "no one will ever know" if you say one thing outside the polling booth, but do another in it.
Trump's ability to attract women voters has been called into question by others in his own party.
Former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, who unsuccessfully ran against the former president for the GOP nomination, said his "hyper-masculine rhetoric" may encourage women to vote for Harris.
During a campaign event in Nevada on Thursday, Trump said he would have Robert F. Kennedy Jnr "work on women's health" if he won office.
Kennedy, a vaccine sceptic and former independent presidential candidate who also, briefly, tried to get on the Democrats' ticket, has claimed Trump has promised him control of the country's public health agencies if he win's Tuesday's election.
By:ABC(责任编辑:admin)
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