A frame from a video posted on Donald Trump’s Truth Social account
Democrats seized on a video shared by Donald Trump as more evidence for what they consider his threat to US democracy and increasingly extremist rhetoric © AFP/Getty Images

Donald Trump’s campaign has removed a video shared by the former president on social media that included a reference to the establishment of a “unified Reich” if the Republican candidate were to win a second term in the White House.

The campaign was forced to delete the video from his Truth Social account on Tuesday, saying it had been accidentally reposted by a staffer who had not noticed the reference to Nazi Germany.

Trump’s sharing of the video reignited concerns about his extremist far-right rhetoric and authoritarian plans if he wins back the White House from President Joe Biden in November’s election.

Trump has vowed to be a dictator on “day one” in his bid to reverse many of Biden’s policies and said he would seek retribution against his political opponents, while vowing to use detention camps and the US military to crack down on undocumented immigrants who were “poisoning the blood” of the country.

Democrats seized on the video as more evidence for what they consider Trump’s threat to US democracy and increasingly extremist rhetoric. “His campaign posted online about if he wins it’ll be a unified Reich — like the Third Reich,” Biden said during a fundraiser in Boston on Tuesday. “This is the same guy that uses Hitler’s language, not America’s.”

Earlier, vice-president Kamala Harris said: “In this moment, extremists are trying to divide our nation, and we see them as they encourage xenophobia and hate.”

Have your say

Joe Biden vs Donald Trump: tell us how the 2024 US election will affect you

Trump has a slight edge over Biden in national polling and in most critical battleground states ahead of the election, but the president’s re-election campaign is hoping it can gain some ground by depicting Trump as a far-right extremist. This could make Trump especially unappealing to moderate and independent voters who dislike both candidates but are on the fence about who to vote for.

The Trump campaign said the video was “not a campaign video” and had been “created by a random account online and reposted by a staffer who clearly did not see the word, while the president was in court”.

The video contained a series of imaginary newspaper articles about what would happen to America if he were to win the election — and under one headline was a phrase in smaller letters hailing the “creation of a unified Reich”.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024. All rights reserved.
Reuse this content (opens in new window) CommentsJump to comments section

Comments