JB Pritzker BLAMES Trump for Violent Threats Against Jews?! Robby Soave | RISING
The Hill
0:04 Well, the tendency to blame everything that anyone does that's
0:07 bad and wrong on President Donald Trump is alive and well.
0:11 Now, Illinois Governor JB Pritsker is getting in on that game.
0:15 Pritsker, billionaire Jewish man,
0:17 knows he's received increased threats of violence.
0:19 And when pressed on the causes of that, he says it's Trump's rhetoric.
0:23 Here we go again.
0:25 I think the environment, look,
0:27 our our leaders set the tone in this country and I think that the president
0:31 of the United States has set a tone where political violence is okay.
0:35 He's advocated it himself before.
0:38 It's a terrible thing.
0:39 I mean, he's experienced target.
0:41 That's what I'm saying.
0:42 He he he's experienced the the other side of that.
0:45 We got to stand up against this.
0:47 We we need to be speaking out against political violence.
0:50 I'm a big believer in it's okay to disagree but not be disagreeable.
0:56 As the interviewer Jonathan Martin of Politico notes that Trump has
0:59 himself been the victim of several serious attempts on his life.
1:03 One just a week and a half ago when
1:05 a madman attempted to enter the White House correspondents dinner.
1:08 Now this guy wasn't there to kill Trump and Trump's
1:10 entire administration because he was
1:12 radicalized by the president's edgy rhetoric.
1:15 He was there because he reads and watches
1:17 and consumes a lot of normie liberal Democrat stuff.
1:22 For all the complaining about Trump's rhetoric,
1:24 you'd think we'd hear more about how
1:26 unhinged liberal rhetoric about Trump has become.
1:29 Hitler, fascist, etc.
1:31 No wonder there are disturbed and demented
1:33 individuals who take those assertions seriously.
1:36 But note in particular that Pritsker
1:38 says the anti-Jewish harassment he receives, that's somehow Trump's fault, too.
1:43 Watch this.
1:44 because of the political violence.
1:46 I think that the anti-semites out there and the people
1:49 who are racist because they know that I stand
1:51 up for communities of color um have come out
1:54 of the woodwork and you know and I receive threats.
1:57 I'm sure that politicians across the country
1:59 are receiving more threats than they have before.
2:02 Uh but I hear about it and in particular
2:04 sometimes I hear the mention of my Judaism,
2:07 right, of my religion that has spiked in the last couple years.
2:12 Yeah.
2:11 Let's not pretend that anti-semitism is rising solely on the far right.
2:16 There's definitely an anti-semitic stray in some conservative circles.
2:19 I concede that.
2:20 But there are no far-right protesters descending
2:23 on college campuses and blocking Jewish students
2:25 from getting to class or publishing leaflets
2:27 celebrating terrorists murdering Jewish people on October 7th.
2:31 That is only a left-wing problem.
2:33 Maybe JB Pritsker should call out his own side from time to time.
2:37 Yet he's stuck on factory settings.
2:39 blame Trump for absolutely everything.
2:43 You know, at some point, leaders of the Democratic party,
2:45 they will have to confront the radicals in their own midst.
2:49 That's part of the reason they're so unpopular.
2:51 Average Americans don't trust them to say no
2:53 to the far-left when it comes to wokeness,
2:56 extreme taxation and regulation, or political radicalism.
2:59 Whether it's Antifa, Black Lives Matter, extreme anti-Jewish demonstrations.
3:04 If the Democratic Party isn't for that, let's hear someone say it.
3:08 Now, some Democrats managed to stand up to the far left.
3:11 One of them is Senator John Federman,
3:12 who's currently being bullied out of his own party
3:15 and may very well become a Republican before his next election.
3:19 I'm almost willing to bet on it.
3:21 Such is the fate of the last sensible moderate Democrat to become a Republican.
3:27 That That's ridiculous.
3:28 Um that's what's going to happen.
3:30 I like the factory settings line.
3:31 I'm not going to lie.
3:32 That was a good one.
3:32 Um I appreciated your little chuckle.
3:35 I don't know if they heard my laugh in the background.
3:37 I think, you know, it I always pause when it comes down
3:41 to trying to figure out who to blame for any violent act.
3:45 Uh I do think overall the country should try to figure out how
3:48 to be more civilized and I think that does start from the top down.
3:51 Um we often talk about the way that President
3:53 Trump behaves uh particularly every single day on Truth Social,
3:57 but also with real actions like putting photos of a man struggling with cancer,
4:02 Biden up as an auto pen in his office and making that appropriate thing to do.
4:06 But the behavior is childish to say the least.
4:09 Threatening.
4:09 No, childish.
4:10 Um, but it's just a disrespect of people
4:13 that we see often when he calls reporters Miss Piggy.
4:16 It's a lack of respect for people, right?
4:18 And so other than that, he said things like,
4:20 "I hate my enemies at Charlie Kirk's funeral." Um,
4:23 he said Second Amendment people could
4:25 stop Hillary Clinton from appointing judges.
4:27 What does that mean to you?
4:29 if second amendment people who have
4:30 the guns should stop Hillary Clinton in 2016.
4:32 I mean, he said that people are
4:33 treasonous and evil when he talked about Democrats.
4:36 Um, he called the enemy from within when he talked about
4:40 he called him an illegitimate president,
4:41 but he's my he said the enemy from within.
4:44 So, he's talking about the people within our own country that we need to get.
4:48 Democrats say he's a threat to democracy and on the ballot
4:51 and they tr they didn't just say it, they took action.
4:54 He also said he wouldn't appear on the ballot.
4:56 Colorado did that.
4:57 They tried it.
4:58 No, I live there.
4:59 I know.
4:59 I live there.
4:59 I said that wasn't right.
5:00 I lived there.
5:02 He actually mentioned violence at rallies.
5:04 He said, "Knock the crap out of them." Remember that in 2016 that he
5:07 encouraged supporters in an Iowa rally to knock the crap out of protesters.
5:11 Um he said, "Fight like hell." When he talked about January 6th,
5:14 but said he didn't mean it like that.
5:16 Don't really fight.
5:17 Just fight with your willpower.
5:18 Remember that?
5:19 He argued that
5:19 the same way your sports team fights like hell.
5:22 Okay.
5:22 Okay.
5:22 So, you know, he said one really violent day, remember this, in 2024,
5:26 we should have like a purge type day
5:27 and that'll stop all the violence in the country.
5:29 Don't even squint like you don't remember that.
5:31 He said one really violent day will cure all this violence.
5:34 So, he suggested that we purge one another
5:36 like the movie and that will solve everything.
5:38 And you're laughing, but Jamie Prrisker can't bring this up.
5:41 He can't bring this up without saying,
5:42 "Oh, well, look over there." like yeah Democrat
5:44 you're saying Trump is a rhetoric is a victim of his own violent rhetoric
5:47 that the people trying to kill Trump who we know why they're trying to do
5:52 it because they write it in their manifesto
5:53 it's because they believe everything liberal
5:55 Democrat and mainstream media people say about
5:57 him and you're saying wait that's Trump's fault
6:00 did he say that did he say the White House correspondence dinner
6:02 attempted shooter I blame that instance on Trump did he say that exactly
6:06 said Trump is normalizing right extreme political rhetoric
6:08 and I'm saying Trump is not normalizing extreme
6:11 political rhetoric because there's extreme political rhetoric coming
6:14 out of the mouths of people on both sides,
6:16 all sides of the political and has been forever.
6:18 The White House correspondent Dennis Shooter uh wrote his manifesto and a lot
6:22 of that had to do with the accusations of pedophilia and Epstein.
6:25 Correct.
6:26 Yeah.
6:26 So that investigation was launched by your Republican
6:31 friend Thomas Massie and a Democrat.
6:35 So when we talk about bipartisanship,
6:36 then he must be affected by he must be affected by both parties.
6:40 Then this guy with the manifesto has to look at both parties and say,
6:43 "Wow, all the different people." Marjorie Taylor Green,
6:46 all the women senators that said, "Oh,
6:48 let's look into Epstein Moore." He should blame all those Republican people.
6:52 Congresswoman, a congresswoman.
6:52 Yes.
6:52 He should, right?
6:53 All the congresswoman, he should say, "Listen,
6:55 I blame everybody on that side as well as Democrats.
6:57 If you want to tie it all in a nice bow,
6:59 remember this is a bipartisan investigation.
7:01 And so if we're pointing to who might
7:03 have persuaded folks to act poorly or illegally,
7:07 then we need to if you're going to play that game because I think that's a never
7:10 thing is when you falsely insinuate that the president is was a complicit in sex
7:14 crimes against children about the most uh
7:16 extreme thing you can accuse someone of.
7:19 It's the most heinous crime in our society for good reason.
7:23 Uh that might motivate people.
7:25 Well, if you believe and so you make that insinuation with zero evidence
7:28 and if you believe in motivation,
7:29 then you have to believe that uh you know when a president
7:31 keeps screaming at the top of his lungs that the election
7:34 was stolen from him and somehow Democrats rigged the election
7:36 and people get so riled up that they storm our capital.
7:38 We're going to have that conver.
7:39 Yeah, let's let's go there because
7:40 you believe that rhetoric can incite violence,
7:44 but you won't connect that dot when it comes to January 6th.
7:46 So that's really confusing to me.
7:48 True.
7:48 One or the other.
7:49 Did President Trump incite that violence because the legal sense?
7:52 No.
7:53 Okay.
7:53 But he encouraged crazy people to do crazy things.
7:56 Do I hold him morally responsible for some of the consequences of that day?
8:01 Sure, I've said so.
8:02 I do.
8:03 Okay, great.
8:03 He should not have uh it would have there's
8:06 a duty and a responsibility to be a good steward
8:10 of the public faith in the role that he was
8:12 in and he hyped up a crowd that then went wild.
8:15 I don't think he's legally culpable for it.
8:18 Um, no.
8:20 People are responsible for their own choices just like the shooter.
8:22 But again, it's I I'm only responding in this way because it is Democrats
8:26 in the mainstream media who are always saying
8:28 it's the fault of Trump for everything everyone does.
8:30 I'm like, okay, but they're shooting at him.
8:33 That's not that's not your fault.
8:34 Then this is where this logic leads.
8:36 I mean, the president, it can't be one way.
8:38 It has to be both ways or no ways.
8:39 You know how politics both ways or no ways?
8:41 Politics.
8:42 Both ways or no ways.
8:44 Politics works by blaming the other side.
8:46 President spent his entire campaign season.
8:48 says you saying that saying that basically the Democrats have
8:53 put him in some type of prison where they're trying
8:55 to constantly imprison him like literally made his life a living.
8:58 I know he literally played the victim.
9:00 I know he played the victim and campaigned on that.
9:02 So my point is pointing fingers is the name of the game here.
9:05 Okay.
9:05 He he's doing the same thing.
9:06 He's trying to get Comey in jail for seashells.
9:10 So he's doing the same thing.
9:11 He's trying to get Leticia in jail.
9:12 He's trying to get Leticia J in jail for hairdresser.
9:15 I've said the seashells thing is stupid.
9:16 Okay.
9:16 I'm saying lamest terms.
9:18 Leticia hairdresser come seashells.
9:20 These are the cases that he's trying to fight.
9:22 So he's doing the same thing to his political foes that was done to him.
9:25 But he wants to point the finger when it's convenient and he can rally the base.
9:28 So we know how this game goes.
9:30 But I don't blame anybody who then decides to act
9:32 violently because of the things that are said, right?
9:34 We need to make sure that we're not saying this is one party's fault.
9:37 But everybody as elected officials should do better in trying to mirror
9:40 what they want to see from the constituents that they represent.
9:43 You don't want to see people just slapping each other up on the street.
9:45 You don't want to see people threatening each other or saying mean things.
9:48 So, let's all try to do a little bit better.
9:50 And it starts with the president.
9:51 JB Pritzkar is pointing that out.
9:52 The leader of the country is ill behaved.
9:56 Republicans MAGA will not accept the proposition
9:58 that only one side has to stand down.
10:01 Both sides have to stand down if that's going to be the case.
10:04 Okay.
10:04 There's only one president in charge right now.
10:05 He's only in one.
10:06 Okay.
10:06 But I I don't believe that Democratic commentators will be
10:10 able to resist blaming anything that goes wrong on Trump's rhetoric.
10:14 A commentator and the president are two
10:16 different things though is what I'm saying.
10:17 JB Pritzkar is talking about a president.
10:19 JB Pritzkar aspires to be the president.
10:20 He might run.
10:21 All right.
10:22 Is Iran is an Iran peace deal coming soon?
10:24 President Trump is signaling that might be the case,
10:27 but he's also issuing a warning.
10:29 Stick around.