Trump tactics come with risks
Scorched-earth campaigning could create lasting U.S. divide, many say
The distrust of U.S. institutions Trump has nurtured among his core supporters is readily apparent.
One North Carolina man predicted in an interview that the military would probably assassinate Hillary Clinton if she's elected president. A woman at an Iowa town hall for Trump's running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, offered to join a revolution if Clinton prevails. Another man at an Ocala, Fla., rally was certain Trump would fire the FBI and scores of other federal bureaucrats in a housecleaning if he wins.
Many who have watched Trump's campaign warn that the spread of such ideas may be only the beginning. The scorched-earth strategy Trump has adopted risks creating a lasting and bitter divide in American society, they say.
“It is going to have consequences,” said Charlie Sykes, a conservative radio host in Wisconsin who has raised alarms about the Republican Party's identity crisis. “Somebody referred to this as civic vandalism: the paranoia, the injection of the conspiracy theories that there are dark forces that somehow are going to rob him of this election.”
Historians, political scientists and other experts say the durability of Trump, what he proudly calls his movement and the extent of its impact will depend heavily on the results of the election.
Even a tight loss, let alone a Trump win, could push his brand of politics further into the mainstream. Not only would future candidates and the GOP adopt some of the sharp rhetoric, but members of Congress in districts carried by Trump might feel compelled to join in, regardless of the outcome of the presidential election.
“If this is a close election, this is a signal that there are real rewards for this type of discourse,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania.
Alternatively, though a Clinton landslide would almost certainly force changes in the two major political parties, it might not create the same fundamental reordering in the country's politics. Without Trump, the movement could die.
Historians point to the strength of the country's institutions and the short memories many Americans have after bitter campaigns, making the case that Trump could present more of a ripple than a sea change.
No matter its results, the election has shown that the country, and both political parties, are splitting apart more deeply. Eight in 10 voters in a Pew Research Center survey released Friday say Trump supporters and Clinton supporters don't just disagree on ideas or policy solutions; they rely on different sets of facts.
Another poll, taken this month by SurveyMonkey, found that 40 percent of voters said they had lost faith in American democracy, while 6 percent said they never had it.
If Trump refuses to concede a close loss to Clinton, that faith could erode even further.
Trump has been a master at tapping into the polarized fact universe, devoting much of a Thursday speech in West Palm Beach, Fla., to castigating the establishment media as part of a larger conspiracy, working with the Clinton machine to destroy him “as part of a concerted, coordinated and vicious attack.”
The conspiracy, he said, includes Clinton meeting “in secret with international banks to plot the destruction of U.S. sovereignty” and enrich “global financial powers, her special interest friends and her donors.”
On Saturday, as sexual assault allegations piled up against him, he tweeted about a “FIX!” and an election being “rigged by the media pushing false and unsubstantiated charges, and outright lies, in order to elect Crooked Hillary!”
The rhetoric had the markings of Trump's campaign chief, Stephen Bannon, who as editor of the conservative website Breitbart News pushed against the mainstream media with stories about a global conspiracy of elites bent on undermining America's culture and civilization.
Clinton has tried to make Trump's temperament the central topic of this election. But the Democratic nominee insisted on Friday that she is not taking satisfaction in his increasingly erratic behavior.
“Damage is being done that we're going to have to repair,” she said during a visit to a campaign office in Seattle. “Divisions are being deepened that we're going to have to try to heal.”
Republicans are expecting a party battle, with Trump supporters on one side blaming mainstream Republicans for backing off from Trump and factions of mainstream Republicans blaming Trump supporters for making him the nominee.
Many of Trump's backers have pledged to stick with him amid a growing list of GOP lawmakers who have renounced their support.
“They're turncoats,” said Terry Gravely, a 72-year-old Trump supporter at a Pence rally in Fletcher, N.C. “They will regret it.”