BEYOND THE PAIL:
Earlier this month, state Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal compared Trump’s closing-week rally at Madison Square Garden to a famed Nazi gathering at the same venue. The Manhattan Democrat was slammed for the remark. Now, after a speaker at Sunday’s mass gathering called Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage” and hurled insults at Blacks, Jews and Palestinians, Hoylman-Sigal defended his earlier comparison.
“Is anyone surprised how dark and divisive the rally ended up being?” he told Playbook. “Women, Jews, Muslims, Puerto Ricans and immigrants were all targeted, straight from the MAGA playbook.” Overnight, the comments at the Trump rally have mobilized Democrats in New York — home to 1.1 million Puerto Ricans — as they seek to capitalize on the controversy in the final eight days of the campaign.
”We’re here to push back, to tell Pennsylvania, to tell Wisconsin, to tell Michigan … vote against Donald Trump, defeat him and send him back to retirement,” said the Dominican American Rep. Adriano Espaillat, speaking at East Harlem’s La Marqueta with federal, state and local elected Democrats, labor representatives and activists.
Joining him were veteran Democratic strategist Luis Miranda and Rep. Nydia Velázquez, a Brooklyn Democrat. Switching seamlessly between English and Spanish and waving Puerto Rican flags, the message of their rally message was simple: Don’t vote for a man who has disrespected us. “We are not garbage,” Miranda said. Velázquez added, “This is a matter of self-respect.”
And one of the country’s most prominent Latina politicians, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, swiftly moved to condemn the remark Sunday night and today. “This was a hate rally,” she said, responding on Morning Joe to Tony Hinchcliffe’s so-called joke. Ocasio-Cortez, who has a strong Puerto Rican identity, also filmed a live reaction to the racist joke with Vice Presidential candidate Tim Walz
during a livestream where the two played the football video game Madden and other games. One of her reps said the prominent New York Democrat is considering another trip to the battleground state of Pennsylvania in the final days of the Harris campaign. She also reposted a post that showed Pennsylvania’s nearly half-a-million Puerto Rican population: “I need every Boricua on here to take that rally clip and drop it in your family WhatsApps and group chats,” she
said. Even New York Republicans seemed to recognize the political threat of Hinchcliffe’s insults and scrambled to run away from them. “As a Latina with friends and family residing in beautiful Puerto Rico, I believe it was a bad joke and a bad idea to have a comedian speak,” Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, a Staten Island Republican who holds Cuban heritage, told Playbook. Malliotakis had
slammed Holyman-Sigal for his comparison, and on Monday said the insults at the rally do not change Trump’s record. “President Trump did more for Hispanics than Biden-Harris by creating millions of jobs, bringing Hispanic unemployment to the lowest level on record, giving our working class a tax cut, doubling the child tax credit and authorizing the Smithsonian Latino History Museum,” she said.
Another New York Republican in a tough fight to defend his seat next week was scrambling after the rally, which he attended. “I’m proud to be Puerto Rican,” Long Island Republican Rep. Anthony D’Esposito wrote on X
. “It’s a beautiful island with a rich culture and an integral part of the USA. The only thing that’s ‘garbage’ was a bad comedy set. Stay on message.” D’Esposito’s opponent, Democrat Laura Gillen, responded to his remarks, saying through a spokesperson that the Republican’s “craven complicity” with Trump is obvious.
Harris supporters, who have long cast Trump’s rhetoric as dangerous and racist, say the rally is proof the dreck of the Trump campaign has reached its apex. The event also featured misogynistic and lewd comments from former pro wrestling star Hulk Hogan and businessman Grant Cardone. Rep. Ritchie Torres, another New York Democrat with Puerto Rican heritage, got into the mix, saying “hatred is not a bug but a feature of Donald Trump's campaign.”
Meanwhile the Trump campaign said the “joke does not reflect the views of President Trump or the campaign.” Another Republican, Senate Minority Leader Rob Ortt, who also criticized the Nazi comparison, had a bit less to say than his counterpart in congress. Asked to respond, Ortt’s spokesperson merely said, “No comment.” —
Jason Beeferman and Emily Ngo |