’I’m not a Nazi,’ Trump insists as Harris blasts ugly rhetoric

Former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at the McCamish Pavilion in Atlanta, Georgia. (AFP)
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Updated 29 October 2024
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’I’m not a Nazi,’ Trump insists as Harris blasts ugly rhetoric

  • Tensions are soaring in a race that polls suggest is too close to call

ATLANTA: Donald Trump told supporters Monday he is “not a Nazi,” using a rally in the final week of a bitter White House race to refute accusations of authoritarianism, including from a former top aide who branded him a fascist.
As he and rival Kamala Harris, the current vice president, entered the final stretch of one of the closest US elections in modern times, each candidate and their teams have ramped up the political rhetoric, inflaming an already tense campaign.
Democrat Harris, who has accused Trump of stoking divisions, crisscrossed Michigan on Monday while the Republican visited Georgia, another of the decisive swing states, where he said critics are accusing him of being a modern-day “Hitler.”
“The newest line from Kamala and her campaign is that everyone who isn’t voting for her is a Nazi,” Trump told a boisterous rally in Atlanta.
“I’m not a Nazi. I’m the opposite of a Nazi.”
The comments come a day after Trump held a major rally in New York’s famed Madison Square Garden that was widely condemned for racist remarks his allies made during the event.
They also follow the recent publication of a New York Times interview in which Trump’s longest-serving White House chief of staff, retired general John Kelly, said the Republican fits the definition of a fascist — something Harris said she agreed with last week.
Kelly also said Trump had remarked that “Hitler did some good things too” and that he “wanted generals like Adolf Hitler had.”

Heightened tensions
Tensions are soaring in a race polls suggest is too close to call, fueled by fears that former president Trump could again refuse to recognize a defeat, as in 2020, and by his harsh rhetoric threatening migrants and political opponents.
On Monday, a fire reportedly consumed hundreds of early ballots cast in a supposedly secure drop-off box in a competitive district in northwestern Washington state.
Another ballot box was damaged hours earlier in Portland, Oregon, where police said in a statement that an “intentional act” of arson sought to “impact the election process.”
Trump has faced renewed outrage after one of the warm-up speakers at his Sunday rally in New York called US territory Puerto Rico “a floating island of garbage.”
Harris, aiming to become the country’s first female president, slammed “that nonsense last night at Madison Square Garden” as she spoke to reporters before boarding Air Force Two on Monday.
“He is focused and actually fixated on his grievances, on himself, and on dividing our country. And it is not in any way something that will strengthen the American family, the American worker.”
Later in Ann Arbor, Michigan, at a rally with her running mate Tim Walz and a crowd of around 20,000, she described how “so much is on the line” on November 5.
“Donald Trump is even more unstable and more unhinged, and now he wants unchecked power.”
His campaign said the Puerto Rico comments did “not reflect the views of President Trump.”
Residents of the island cannot vote in presidential elections, but those within the United States proper — which includes about 450,000 Puerto Ricans in crucial battleground Pennsylvania — can.
A top Harris surrogate, former president Barack Obama, was in Philadelphia Monday rallying her supporters — and assailing Trump’s allies for “trotting out and peddling the most racist, sexist, bigoted stereotypes.”
He also appealed to Pennsylvania voters with Puerto Rican ties, saying: “If somebody does not see you as fellow citizens with equal claims to opportunity, to the pursuit of happiness, to the American dream, you should not vote for them.”

Swing state battle
Trump used Sunday’s event — likened by Democrats to an infamous 1939 rally of American fascists in the same venue — to lash out on familiar topics including undocumented migrants and domestic opponents whom he again branded the “enemy from within.”
And in Atlanta, he reprised his attacks on Harris, calling her a “hater,” and said former first lady Michelle Obama was “nasty” for criticizing him.
More than 47 million Americans have already cast ballots in early voting — including outgoing President Joe Biden, who voted Monday near his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.
As the clock ticks down, the challenge for Harris and Trump is both to energize core supporters and pull in the tiny number of persuadable voters who might still tip the balance — especially in the seven swing states where polls have them running neck-and-neck.
On Tuesday, Harris will deliver what her campaign calls a “closing argument” from the same spot near the White House where then-president Trump stoked his supporters on January 6, 2021, to launch a violent assault on the US Capitol.


Dignified transfer for Kentucky soldier who was the 7th US service member to die in Iran war

Updated 54 min 32 sec ago
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Dignified transfer for Kentucky soldier who was the 7th US service member to die in Iran war

  • Army Sgt. Benjamin N. Pennington, 26, of Glendale, Kentucky died Sunday

ELIZABETHTOWN, USA: Vice President JD Vance joined the grieving family of a Kentucky man who was the seventh US service member to die in combat during the Iran war as his remains were brought back to the US Monday evening.
The dignified transfer, a solemn event that honors US service members killed in action, took place at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware for Army Sgt. Benjamin N. Pennington, 26, of Glendale, Kentucky. He died Sunday after being wounded during a March 1 attack on the Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia, a Pentagon statement said.
Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth saluted alongside high ranking military officials as the transfer case draped with the American flag was carried from the military aircraft and into an awaiting vehicle.
Mike Bell, retired pastor of Glendale Christian Church, said he’d known Pennington since he was a toddler and got a call from Pennington’s father when the soldier was hurt.
“I talked to Tim Saturday morning, and he was doing a little better, and they were talking about maybe moving him to Germany,” Bell said. Tim Pennington called again that evening, Bell said, to ask for prayers as his son’s condition was worsening, and then later told him the soldier had succumbed to his injuries.
“He was just a quiet person,” said Bell, noting that Pennington attended the church’s after-school program. “I mean, he never attracted attention because he was just steady doing what he needed to do to do it.”
State and local officials grieve
Pennington was assigned to the 1st Space Battalion, 1st Space Brigade of the US Army Space and Missile Defense Command based at Fort Carson, Colorado.
The unit’s mission focused on “missile warning, GPS, and long-haul satellite communications,” according to their website.
“This just breaks my heart,” Keith Taul, judge-executive of Hardin County, where Pennington was from, said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press. “I have known the family for at least 30 years. I can’t imagine the pain and suffering they are experiencing.”
Glendale is an unincorporated town of about 300 residents south of the Hardin County seat of Elizabethtown.
In a statement posted on social media, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear called Pennington “a hero who sacrificed everything serving our country.”
Six other soldiers killed
The other six service members killed since the conflict began on Feb. 28 were Army reservists killed in Kuwait when an Iranian drone struck an operations center at a civilian port.
President Donald Trump on Saturday joined grieving families at Dover Air Force Base at the dignified transfer for those six US soldiers.
The dignified transfer is considered one of the most somber duties of any commander in chief. During his first term, Trump said bearing witness to the transfer was “the toughest thing I have to do” as president.
‘An American hero’
Pennington graduated in 2017 from Central Hardin High School, where he was enrolled in the automotive technology pathway, district spokesman John Wright told the AP. Former automotive tech instructor Tom Pitt, who taught Pennington in 2017 at Hardin County Early College and Career Center, called him “an American hero.”
“A lot of times as a teacher, you have students who are smart, you have students who are charismatic, who are likable, dare I say, enchanting,” said Pitt, who called Pennington Nate. “Rarely do you have students who are all of those. And Ben Pennington was all of those. He was basically the quintessential all-American.”
Photos on his and family members’ Facebook pages show that Pennington achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in August 2017. His Eagle project was the demolition of some old baseball dugouts in Glendale, said Darin Life, former committee chairman for Troop 221.
“If you look up Eagle Scout, his picture’s probably there,” said Life, who knew Pennington throughout his scouting career. “He loved his country. I would have expected nothing less of him than to lose his life protecting his country.”
Awards and decorations
A month after his Eagle ceremony, Pennington posted a photo of himself taking the oath of enlistment. He entered the service as a unit supply specialist and was assigned to the Space and Missile Command on June 10, 2025, the Army said in a release.
Among his awards and decorations were the Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and the Army Service Ribbon.
“The US Army Space and Missile Defense Command is deeply saddened by the loss of Sgt. Pennington,” said Lt. Gen. Sean A. Gainey, USASMDC commanding general. “He gave the ultimate sacrifice for the country he loved.”
Col. Michael F. Dyer, 1st Space Brigade commander, described Pennington as “a dedicated and experienced noncommissioned officer who led with strength, professionalism and sense of duty.”
Pennington will be posthumously promoted to staff sergeant, the Pentagon said.