Trump’s Victory Speech After Super Tuesday Conjures a Dark Vision

As he dominated the Super Tuesday battlefield, former President Donald Trump warned of dark days ahead if President Biden were to win a second term. “We’re a third-world country,” he said repeatedly. Former President Donald J. Trump on Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.Credit…Scott McIntyre for The New York Times Published March 5, 2024Updated […]

Trump’s Victory Speech After Super Tuesday Conjures a Dark Vision

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As he dominated the Super Tuesday battlefield, former President Donald Trump warned of dark days ahead if President Biden were to win a second term. “We’re a third-world country,” he said repeatedly.

Former President Donald J. Trump onstage behind a lectern, speaking to a crowd, with American flags behind him and his image projected on TVs to either side of him.
Former President Donald J. Trump on Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla.Credit…Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

Michael Gold

Despite dominating the Super Tuesday nominating contests, former President Donald J. Trump gave a victory speech short on celebration or exultation and long on sinister evocations of what he portrayed as a grim fate for the country if President Biden is re-elected.

“We’ve watched our country take a great beating over the last three years,” Mr. Trump told supporters on Tuesday night at Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence in Palm Beach, Fla. “And nobody thought a thing like this would be possible.”

He made no mention of his lone Republican rival, Nikki Haley, his former United Nations ambassador, whose victory in the Vermont primary — the first state she has carried — was called by The Associated Press just as he finished speaking.

A somber Mr. Trump recited a familiar list of grievances, insisting that the nation was descending toward chaos under Mr. Biden’s leadership and raising doubts about election integrity even as he has swept through the Republican primary contests.

“We’re a third-world country at our borders, and we’re a third-world country at our elections,” Mr. Trump said.

His speech was yet another signal that he has turned his focus toward the general election and an increasingly likely fight against Mr. Biden.

Mr. Trump asserted, as he often does, that foreign policy crises in Ukraine and Gaza would have been averted had he only won in 2020.

And he again characterized the migrants surging across the nation’s southern border at record levels as part of an “invasion,” broadly casting them as violent criminals and murderers.

Border authorities who worked for the former president have said that most of those who cross the border are vulnerable families fleeing poverty and violence.

Mr. Trump did briefly nod to his victories, calling Tuesday an “amazing day” and thanking his family and campaign staff.

Even as Ms. Haley won Vermont, and has put up strong showings in several states that suggest a faction of Republicans remain opposed to his candidacy, Mr. Trump maintained that the party would unite behind him.

His success, he said, was “ultimately going to unify this country and unify this party.”

Michael Gold is a political correspondent for The Times covering the campaigns of Donald J. Trump and other candidates in the 2024 presidential elections. More about Michael Gold