Opposition outrage over Donald Trumpâs rabble-rousing demagoguery turned to bewilderment after the Republican nominee spent 40 minutes swaying to his favourite songs at a rally near Philadelphia, prompting Kamala Harris to express apparent concern for his mental state.
âHope heâs okay,â Harris, the US vice-president and Democratic nominee, posted on social media, accompanying footage of a performance that many observers agreed was bizarre, even by Trumpâs standards.
The ad hoc music fest in the Pennsylvania suburb of Oaks happened after two members of the audience at an indoor rally fainted, apparently because of the heat.
When Trump requested air-conditioning, the event moderator, South Dakota governor Kristi Noem, tried to keep things strictly political with a joke alluding to high inflation. âThey probably canât afford it, sir, in this economy,â she said.
Trump then decided to switch tack.
âLetâs not do any more questions. Letâs just listen to music. Letâs make it into a music. Who the hell wants to hear questions, right?â he said.
A nine-song playlist ensued, that included standard Trump rally favourites such as James Brownâs Itâs A Manâs, Manâs, Manâs World, the Village Peopleâs YMCA, Nothing Compares 2 U by Sinead OâConnor, and Luciano Pavarottiâs rendition of Ave Maria, all played as the candidate stood mid-stage swaying or gently bouncing on his heels, with Noem joining in to mimic his movements.
Eventually, Trump concluded: âThose two people who went down are patriots. We love them. And because of them, we ended up with some great music, right?â
The resort to music in place of angry, provocative rhetoric was not without its ironies. A long list of musical artists â including Celine Dion, Abba, Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen â have denounced or taken legal steps to stop the Trump campaign playing their songs at rallies. Rufus Wainright â whose cover of Leonard Cohenâs Hallelujah Trump also danced to at the rally â said in 2016 shortly before the election that he would not sing it again unless Trump lost.
It also came at a time when Harris was calling on the media and voters to play special attention to the much darker themes that are more frequently featured at Trump rallies to illustrate the threat to freedom she says he would pose if he was returned to the White House.
At a rally of her own in Erie, Pennsylvania, on Monday, Harris took the unusual step of playing footage from Trumpâs rallies of him excoriating opponents as âthe enemy withinâ, saying it showed him to be âunstable and unhingedâ.
âHe considers anyone who doesnât support him or who will not bend to his will an enemy of our country,â Harris said after playing a clip of the comment on a giant screen. âThis is among the reasons I believe so strongly that a second Trump term would be a huge risk for America, and dangerous.â
Trumpâs interlude recalled the days of his relative youth in the 1970s and 1980s, when he was a fixture at New Yorkâs Studio 54 nightclub and rubbed shoulders with celebrities like Mick Jagger and Diana Ross. Despite the former presidentâs professed enthusiasm for vintage hits from the era, the venueâs founder told the Guardian in 2018 that he never saw Trump dance when he was in the club.
Trumpâs staff depicted the episode as a joyful âlovefestâ â perhaps subconsciously trying to imitate the theme of âjoyâ that Harris proclaimed in the early stages of her campaign.
âTotal lovefest at the PA townhall! Everyone was so excited they were fainting so @realDonaldTrump turned to music,â Steven Cheung, a Trump campaign spokesperson, wrote on X. âNobody wanted to leave and wanted to hear more songs from the famous DJT Spotify playlist!â
Karoline Leavitt, another spokesperson, posted simply: âDJ Trump.â
Other social media users were less impressed. âDonald Trump is not well,â wrote one. âHe ended his town hall early and then stood on the stage awkwardly for nearly 30 minutes while random music played over the PA.â Another called it âabsolutely INSANE. This was supposed to be a Town Hall.â