Ahead of the midterms, Donald Trump has doubled down on his calls to “nationalize” elections. On Tuesday, the president told reporters he believed the federal government should “get involved” if states “can’t count the votes legally and honestly.”
During his remarks, Trump claimed without evidence that three cities — Detroit, Philadelphia, and Atlanta — had “horrible corruption in elections.”
On Thursday’s “The Weeknight,” co-host Alicia Menendez said it was “interesting” that Trump chose those specific locations to highlight, noting that each is Democratic-controlled and boasts a large Black population.
“I think part of what we’re being forced to reckon with in this moment is that there have always been efforts to prevent people of color, marginalized people, from heading to the polls,” Menendez said. “We still have never seen anything quite like this.”
MS NOW political analyst and Princeton University professor Eddie S. Glaude Jr. told Menendez that Trump’s comments were part of an effort to delegitimize the process of elections in the U.S. “We’re soaked in lies, he said. “We’re drowning in disinformation.”
“He’s undermining trust such that he can then intervene in the ways that we know he’s going to intervene,” he explained, adding that Trump was “setting the stage for purging voter rolls, undermining the ability of people of color to vote.”
Glaude stressed that Trump’s efforts need to be recognized as “a five-alarm fire” and Americans “need to understand what is really at stake here.”
During the conversation, Menendez’s co-host Michael Steele said Republicans should be pressured to stand up to Trump and defend the independence of elections.
However, Glaude said he did not believe that was possible, telling Steele that “in a reasonable world, that seems like that would work.”








