New Polling Shows the Left's Climate Change Hysteria Losing Steam
America's Largest Muslim Advocacy Group Is Very Upset Their Pro-Hamas Encampment Is Gone
The Timing of the Police Raid at GWU Is Interesting
University of Ottawa Students Make a Big Error in Their Pro-Hamas Graffiti
Joe Biden Just Lost Another Battle With His Teleprompter
Biden's Use of TikTok Cited to Support Company's Lawsuit Against the Government
Gov. Abbott Has a Message for Texas Schools Following Biden's Title IX Rewrite
The 2024 Pulitzer Prizes Show the Focus Is Less on Journalism and More...
Here’s Why This Democrat Rep Thinks NPR Is 'Necessary’ for Americans
Department of Education's Move Forces Jewish Groups to Pull Out of Meeting
Sickening: 'Newcomer' Illegal Immigrant Arrested in Florida for Heinous Crime
The IRA Is Punishing Small Businesses and Putting Cancer Patients at Risk
House Dems Are Asking for Executive Action on the Border, but KJP of...
Boeing Cargo Plane Forced to Make Emergency Landing After Gear Fails
Vulnerable Dem Incumbent Sherrod Brown: Biden's Politics 'Not Much Different From Mine'
OPINION

Trump Takes Charge

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Editor’s Note: This piece was co-authored by John Schlafly.

Sunday night’s town hall telecast from Washington University in St. Louis was a reminder of why Donald Trump dominated the field of 17 candidates who tried out for the Republican presidential nomination. Trump’s compelling performance in the second presidential debate was one that none of the other Republican hopefuls could have given.

Advertisement

As if in response to the pundits who demanded that he be more disciplined and “presidential” in the debates, Trump gave what amounted to a master class in those skills. Without yielding his steady command of the evening, Trump was quick on his feet and several of his retorts seemed to unnerve Hillary as she pursued her strategy of relentless put-downs.

For example, when Hillary pontificated why she considered Donald unfit to be in charge of the laws of our country, Trump responded by telling Hillary that the real reason is “because you’d be in jail” if Trump were administering the laws. People have had their lives destroyed based on a fraction of the legal violations that Hillary has perpetrated.

Hillary switched back and forth on camera from her phony smile and her mean-spirited real self, which the split screen on television captured for tens of millions of viewers to see. Trump, in contrast, came across as honest and far more believable.

Perhaps the most telling moment in the debate was when Hillary was asked about the long-delayed release of excerpts from her highly paid speeches to Wall Street bankers. She had concealed those sentiments during her campaign for the Democratic nomination, despite Bernie Sanders’ taunt that her paid speeches were more important to the voters than Donald Trump’s tax returns.

Advertisement

In one of those secret speeches, she told her exclusive audience that “you need both a public and a private position” on the issues facing America. When Martha Raddatz asked her about that two-faced admission, Hillary stammered and compared herself to Abraham Lincoln as portrayed in the Steven Spielberg movie based on a book by Doris Kearns Goodwin.

Trump looked directly into the camera in disbelief at Hillary’s ridiculous answer and subsequently retorted, “Honest Abe never lied. That’s the big difference between Abraham Lincoln and you.”

In another 2013 speech, given in New York to executives of a Brazilian bank that paid her $225,000, Hillary said: “My dream is a hemispheric common market, with open trade and open borders.” That was what her well-heeled Wall Street audience wanted to hear, but it’s the opposite of what Trump and Sanders voters support.

Of the handful of Republicans who have turned against Trump, many, like Hillary, are themselves staunch supporters of “open trade and open borders.” Hillary’s “dream” of a “hemispheric common market” has been a longstanding project of the Bush family, including President George W. and his brother Jeb.

Hillary’s “private position” for “open borders” echoes what her husband, former president Bill Clinton, said to business leaders in Melbourne, Australia on September 10, 2001. As the host of that private meeting told the local newspaper, “The (former) president believes the world will be a better place if all borders are eliminated.”

Advertisement

Less than 24 hours after his Melbourne speech, 19 Muslims from the Middle East exploited our open borders to launch the 9/11 attacks against America.

Two years later at Yale University, Bill declared: “I think the great mission of the 21st century is to create a genuine global community” with an “over-arching system” of global governance. And in 2007 Bill Clinton praised the benefits of “open borders” and “easy immigration” while delivering the keynote address to a conference of 14,000 Indian Americans.

Eliminating national borders is the ultimate goal of globalists in both parties, who now say we must open America’s doors to thousands of Muslims posing as refugees from the civil war in Syria. Hillary would not deny or disavow Trump’s charge that she plans to increase by 550 percent the number of Syrian refugees that Obama has allowed to resettle here.

In a 2013 speech in Chicago, just released by Wikileaks, Hillary admitted that Syrian refugees pose a real threat because Syria’s immediate neighbors, Jordan and Turkey, “can’t possibly vet all those refugees. So they don’t know if, you know, jihadists are coming in along with legitimate refugees.”

Trump also effectively blamed Hillary for the thousands of criminal aliens, including murderers, who are set free and allowed to remain here because their home countries won’t take them back. As secretary of state, Hillary failed to use her leverage to pressure countries to take back their own citizens.

Advertisement

Trump’s strong performance in the second debate should silence his critics and energize his immense base that cuts across the entire political spectrum. Projecting a calm authority while staying relentlessly on message, Trump has reset his campaign on a path toward victory over the establishment and the media.

John and Andy Schlafly are sons of Phyllis Schlafly (1924-2016) whose 27th book, The Conservative Case for Trump, was published posthumously on September 6.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos