US election live: speaker defends his racist Puerto Rico joke at Trump rally as backlash grows | US elections 2024




Tony Hinchcliffe doubles down on hateful jokes at Trump rally

In response to Democratic representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s objection to his racist jokes, made at Donald Trump’s rally held at Madison Square Garden on Sunday night, Tony Hinchcliffe posted on X:

These people have no sense of humor. Wild that a vice presidential candidate would take time out of his “busy schedule” to analyze a joke taken out of context to make it seem racist. I love Puerto Rico and vacation there. I made fun of everyone…watch the whole set. I’m a comedian Tim…might be time to change your tampon.

Ocasio-Cortez was on a live stream with the vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz when news of the comments emerged.

These people have no sense of humor. Wild that a vice presidential candidate would take time out of his “busy schedule” to analyze a joke taken out of context to make it seem racist. I love Puerto Rico and vacation there. I made fun of everyone…watch the whole set. I’m a… https://t.co/VFxHRcdv5k

— Tony Hinchcliffe (@TonyHinchcliffe) October 27, 2024
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Key events

Karoline Leavitt, national press secretary of Donald Trump’s campaign, on Monday issued a demand for an apology for “disgraceful comments” she believes were smearing the supporters of a presidential contender.

She was not, however, referring to the hateful, racist remarks directed towards Puerto Ricans by the comedian Tony Hinchcliffe at Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally; or Tucker Carlson’s description of Kamala Harris as a “Samoan-Malaysian, low IQ former California prosecutor”; or the radio personality Sid Rosenberg’s claim that Hillary Clinton is a “sick bastard”, made during a rant that included references to “fucking illegals”.

Leavitt’s outrage was directed instead at Tim Walz, Democratic vice-presidential nominee, for remarks he made claiming Trump had “descended into madness” in the past few weeks, and that his Sunday rally in New York had “a direct parallel to a big rally that happened in the 1930s at Madison Square Garden”, namely a 1939 Nazi rally that took place there.

“Walz needs to apologize for his disgraceful comments smearing Trump supporters,” Leavitt said in a statement. “This kind of rhetoric has already inspired assassination attempts.”

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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the outspoken Democratic New York congresswoman, called Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden event “a hate rally” during an appearance on Monday on MSNBC.

The politician known as AOC represents a district with a large Latino population:

This was not just a presidential rally. This was not just a campaign rally. These are mini-January 6 rallies. These are mini-stop-the-steal rallies. These are rallies to prime an electorate into rejecting the results of an election if it doesn’t go the way that they want.

Trump, and his fellow speakers, “do not respect the law of the US”, Ocasio-Cortez said, suggesting they were using rhetoric to take the election “by force”:

That is what they mean, and that is what they are doing when they are inciting violence and hatred against Latinos, against Black Americans, against Americans who don’t have children.

We have to understand how unhinged this campaign has gotten, and the only reason the rhetoric has gotten this far is precisely because they’re trying to prime the kind of froth that led up to the January 6 on the capitol. It’s important we connect those dots.

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Kerry Washington, John Legend and Stevie Wonder are among a number of prominent voices who will feature in campaign commercials for Kamala Harris this week targeting Black voters.

The Democratic national committee announced on Monday it was spending “a seven-figure sum” on the I Will Vote campaign targeting Black voters through ads in 55 Black publications and on 48 Black radio stations nationwide.

Kamala Harris listens as Stevie Wonder performs Redemption Song during an early voting rally in Jonesboro, Georgia, on Sunday. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

“The Black vote will play a major role in the outcome of this election, and there’s only one candidate who will prioritize the safety and dignity of the Black community while advancing our fundamental freedoms, rights, and economic opportunity,” Jaime Harrison, DNC chair, said in a statement announcing the buy-up.

Some recent polls have suggested Harris is losing support from Black voters, particularly Black men, while other experts say there is no need for Democrats to panic. My colleague Gloria Oladipo took a look at the issue earlier this month:

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Here’s our story of the resignation of Washington Post columnist Michele Norris, the latest high profile writer to leave the newspaper in protest at its decision not to endorse a candidate in next week’s presidential election.

Norris says the Post’s non-call was a “terrible mistake & an insult to the paper’s own longstanding standard of regularly endorsing candidates since 1976”.

Meanwhile, CNN’s Brian Stelter reports that the newspaper’s editorial page editor David Shipley is set to meet disgruntled staff this afternoon to discuss the episode, a gathering Stelter predicts will be “tense”.

The public backlash against the Post included uncounted cancelations of subscriptions and criticism from many, including legendary reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, who broke the Watergate scandal.

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Voters think Trump unlikely to concede if he loses - poll

A survey published Monday by CNN contained a revelation unlikely to surprise many: most voters think Donald Trump is unlikely to concede defeat if he loses to Kamala Harris next week.

The Republican nominee and former president, of course, still hasn’t admitted he lost the last contest, in 2020, to Joe Biden. That might help explain why only 30% of registered voters in the CNN/SSRS poll believe he would accept defeat to Harris, and call her to concede.

Other findings: 73% say Harris would accept an election loss; 54% believe Harris would concede if she lost and that Trump would not; 18% say that both candidates would do so; and only 11% believe Harris would not concede, but Trump would.

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Good morning, it’s Richard Luscombe in the US, taking over from my colleague Daniel Lavelle. I’ll be guiding you through the next few hours of what promises to be a lively first day of the last full week of an exhausting, and bruising, presidential election campaign.

  • Joe Biden is expected to cast his vote in Wilmington, Delaware, this morning, before heading for the White House. His first scheduled public remarks for the day are at a Diwali celebration this afternoon, but we’ll be watching out for any comments he makes as he casts his ballot.

  • Kamala Harris will be in Saginaw, Michigan, this afternoon, meeting with union workers before a rally in Ann Arbor on Monday evening.

  • Donald Trump will be in Georgia, with an event in Atlanta set for this evening.

  • Wisconsin is where we’ll find the vice-presidential hopefuls, Democrat Tim Walz appearing in Manitowoc and Waukesha before joining Harris later in Ann Arbor. Republican JD Vance will be Wausau and Racine.

As we prepare for today’s feast of election fare, it’s worth catching up on our account of the story of the day (so far at least), Trump’s frenzy of racism, anger and vitriol last night at Madison Square Garden, written by my colleagues Adam Gabbatt and Ed Pilkington:

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Democratic vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz travels to key swing state to win support among the Navajo Nation.

Walz visited Window Rock, Arizona, the Navajo Nation’s capital, on Saturday afternoon, aiming to connect with Navajo voters just 10 days before the general election.

“It is a privilege to be standing here on Navajo land,” said Walz, the governor of Minnesota. “I am grateful you would see fit to bring me here. I am here today because there are 10 more days until the election and we are not taking any vote for granted. We are here to show respect to the Navajo Nation and earn your vote.”

Walz, whose state is home to 11 federally recognized Native American tribes, spoke on the importance of Indigenous communities.

“The highest law is to honor tribal sovereignty, promote tribal consultation, ensure tribal self-determination across this country,” Walz said. “If tribal nations are doing well and your kids are doing well, the rest of the country is going to be just fine.”

Tim Walz addresses the crowd at a Native Americans for Harris-Walz event in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Sunday. Photograph: Rachel Aston/AP
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Liz Cheney 'confident' Kamala Harris will win election

Liz Cheney, the former Republican congresswoman, said she was “confident” that Kamala Harris would be the next president.

“We are not cruel, and we aren’t evil, and we don’t elect people who are,” she told an event called An Afternoon With Liz Cheney, held at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark.

Cheney claimed that during the Capitol riot, Jim Jordan, a Republican representative from Ohio, offered her his arm to help with evacuating the building. “Get away from me – you effing did this,” Cheney said she responded.

She said that the decisions by the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times not to publish endorsements over the next president was “all about fear”.

Fear is “a tool that every autocrat uses”, she said.

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A second columnist for the Washington Post resigns in wake of the newspaper’s failure to back a candidate for president.


Michele Norris announced on X that “of yesterday, I have decided to resign from my role as a columnist for The Washington Post — a newspaper that I love. In a moment like this, everyone needs to make their own decisions. This is the reason for mine.”

She added that the Post’s non-endorsement was a “terrible mistake” and “an insult to the paper’s own longstanding standard of regularly endorsing candidates since 1976”.

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Tony Hinchcliffe doubles down on hateful jokes at Trump rally

In response to Democratic representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s objection to his racist jokes, made at Donald Trump’s rally held at Madison Square Garden on Sunday night, Tony Hinchcliffe posted on X:

These people have no sense of humor. Wild that a vice presidential candidate would take time out of his “busy schedule” to analyze a joke taken out of context to make it seem racist. I love Puerto Rico and vacation there. I made fun of everyone…watch the whole set. I’m a comedian Tim…might be time to change your tampon.

Ocasio-Cortez was on a live stream with the vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz when news of the comments emerged.

These people have no sense of humor. Wild that a vice presidential candidate would take time out of his “busy schedule” to analyze a joke taken out of context to make it seem racist. I love Puerto Rico and vacation there. I made fun of everyone…watch the whole set. I’m a… https://t.co/VFxHRcdv5k

— Tony Hinchcliffe (@TonyHinchcliffe) October 27, 2024
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AOC: racist Puerto Rico joke at Trump rally 'super upsetting'

Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez says she found Tony Hinchcliffe’s jokes at Trump’s rally “super upsetting”

Hinchcliffe’s racist jokes included:

“There’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico.

“These Latinos, they love making babies too. Just know that. They do. They do. There’s no pulling out. They don’t do that. They come inside. Just like they did to our country.”

Democratic representative Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez (AOC), who is of Puerto Rican descent, was watching the comedian’s set with vice-president candidate Tim Walz and commented:

When you have some a-hole calling Puerto Rico ‘floating garbage,’ know that that’s what they think about you. It’s what they think about anyone who makes less money than them… I want every Puerto Rican in Philadelphia and Reading and across the country to see this clip”

Gov. Walz and @AOC react to this clip: “When you have some a-hole calling Puerto Rico ‘floating garbage,’ know that that's what they think about you. It's what they think about anyone who makes less money than them… I want every Puerto Rican in Philadelphia and Reading and… https://t.co/L5GdSvLJWT pic.twitter.com/y9DQTABM0v

— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) October 27, 2024
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Tech titan Elon Musk spoke at the MSG rally and introduced Melania Trump.

Trump called Musk “a genius” and “special”.

Musk said: “Your money is being wasted, and the department of government efficiency is going to fix that.”

Trump’s claim that Musk is a genius is undermined slightly by his business record. Several of Musk’s enterprises, including Tesla and SpaceX, have relied on US subsidies and government contracts.

Musk’s stewardship of Tesla has been marked by over-promising and under-delivering on a range of products, including fully self-driving vehicles; the so-called Hyperloop, which was intended to revolutionise transport, ended up being scrapped to build a parking lot; two million Tesla cars had to be recalled due to safety concerns, and the Tesla Roadster, a car promised to consumers in 2017, was delayed again this year.

Since purchasing Twitter (now X) for $44bn, the value of the social media platform has been reduced by over half.

Musk has also faced criticism after reports that he has spoken privately with Russian president Vladimir Putin.

Elon Musk at last night’s rally. Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images
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Trump campaign distances itself from racist jokes at rally

Donald Trump’s campaign has moved to distance the presidential hopeful from racist insults aimed at Puerto Ricans amid a backlash over remarks at a rally at New York’s Madison Square Garden last night.

“I don’t know if you guys know this, but there’s literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now. I think it’s called Puerto Rico,” said Tony Hinchcliffe, a stand-up comic told the Republican event. His set also included lewd and racist comments about Latinos, Jews and Black people, all key constituencies in the election just nine days away.

His joke was immediately criticised by Kamala Harris’s campaign. The Puerto Rican music superstar Bad Bunny backed Harris shortly after Hinchcliffe’s appearance.

The normally pugnacious Trump campaign took the rare step of distancing itself from Hinchcliffe. “This joke does not reflect the views of President Trump or the campaign,” senior adviser Danielle Alvarez said in a statement.

Angel Cintron, the head of the GOP on the island, and US representative Maria Elvira Salazar, who represents parts of Miami and has participated in recent Trump events, were among Republicans to criticise Hinchcliffe’s comments.

Disgusted by @TonyHinchcliffe’s racist comment calling Puerto Rico a 'floating island of garbage.'

This rhetoric does not reflect GOP values.

Puerto Rico sent 48,000+ soldiers to Vietnam, with over 345 Purple Hearts awarded. This bravery deserves respect.

Educate yourself!

— María Elvira Salazar 🇺🇸 (@MaElviraSalazar) October 27, 2024

Luis Fonsi, a Puerto Rican artist who sings the hit “Despacito,” went on Instagram and wrote “going down this racist path ain’t it.”

“We are not OK with this constant hate,” he wrote in a message shared on Instagram. “It’s been abundantly clear that these people have no respect for us.”

The singer Ricky Martin, who had previously endorsed Harris, was also offended by the comment and said “that’s what they think of us,” on Instagram.

More on this shortly, in other developments:

  • Trump will join National Faith Advisory Board for a faith summit in Atlanta this afternoon and will attend a rally in the city later.

  • Harris and her vice-presidential pick, Tim Walz, to hold a joint campaign rally in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Monday.

  • Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen are holding a campaign rally for Harris in Philadelphia.

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Posted: 2024-10-28 15:29:05

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