Trump revives McCarthy-era rhetoric, paints Democrats as 'red menace' ahead of US midterms
US President Donald Trump is using Cold War-style warnings against communism, calling the Democratic Party a 'red menace' that must be cut out 'like a cancer,' as Republicans sharpen their midterm strategy.

US President Donald Trump is reviving Cold War-style warnings about communism, casting the Democratic Party as a red 'menace' as Republicans hunt for a midterm message to hold their narrow grip on Congress. The rhetoric, echoing the anti-communist crusades of the 1950s, has surged from Trump's speeches into the broader Republican campaign machine after a string of democratic socialist primary victories in New York and Colorado.
During weekend speeches at Mount Rushmore and in Washington marking America's 250th anniversary, Trump warned of a communist 'menace' that needed to be cut out 'like a cancer.' At a recent religious conference he went further, accusing the Democratic left of being 'hardcore, godless communists' who wanted to 'completely destroy the traditional American way of life.'
The rhetoric reflects a sharpening midterm strategy for Republicans facing frustration over inflation, affordability and the fallout from Trump's war with Iran. Analysts say the party is trying to turn the elections from a referendum on Trump into a choice between two ideologies, using the rise of the far-left to paint all Democrats as radical.
'Trump's Republican Party is perceived by many voters – particularly independents – as too extreme in their policies,' Daniel Drezner, a politics professor at Tufts University in Massachusetts, told AFP. 'One way to address that before the midterms is to paint the opposition party as even more extreme.'
The Washington Post reported that Trump's allies have sharply increased their online use of 'communist' and 'communism,' with average weekly mentions up 43 percent from a year ago. Senior Republicans have echoed the message. House Speaker Mike Johnson warned Sunday that 'barbarians are inside the gate' while Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt called the election a choice 'between communism and common sense.'
Rick Stengel, an official in the Obama administration, joked that Trump's Independence Day remarks sounded as if the White House had just 'discovered a July Fourth Joseph McCarthy speech from 1952.' Senator McCarthy led a 1950s crusade against alleged Soviet infiltration; his chief counsel, Roy Cohn, later became Trump's mentor.
Some left-leaning analysts also say 'wokeness' – framed by its opponents as a hectoring form of political correctness – has made Trump's attacks easier. Spencer Critchley, a communications consultant who worked on Obama's campaigns, says the ideology has attracted actual communists and coincides with young Americans' growing, if muddled, support for socialism. 'So while in no sense is the Democratic Party communist, it's become easier for Trump and his enablers to spread the lie that it is,' Critchley told AFP.
Brad Chase, a veteran communications strategist, sees Trump's communism fixation as a messaging misstep. 'Communism is a word that just doesn't resonate anymore' for Americans under 50, Chase told AFP. Democrats argue the attack is a distraction from pocketbook concerns. 'The reason Trump reached all the way back to Karl Marx at Mount Rushmore is that he's got nothing to say to a 28-year-old who can't make rent,' progressive commentator Thom Hartmann told AFP.

