US election antics should not be enough to dissuade Americans from voting, Sebastian Gorka has said.
Speaking on GB News, Donald Trump’s former adviser hit out at people who are said to be turning their backs on ballot boxes due to the vitriolic nature of this year’s US election discourse.
In a furious rant on the People’s Channel, Gorka demanded those who can be classed in this category have their right to vote stripped.
GB News’s Stephen Dixon said: “I heard this from someone who traditionally votes Republican who has not been able to vote for Trump because they don’t like where things have gone in terms of negative campaigning and name-calling.
“Let’s talk about facts. When we were in the White House, the average mortgage payment in America was $800-a-month. Under the Biden-Harris administration it has ballooned to $1,800.
“The most valuable thing you own, the cost of maintaining it has doubled.
“If your friend has a problem with mean tweets, he is a child and he should have no say in the future of America.”
Earlier in the conversation, Gorka made it clear he feels emboldened about Trump’s chances.
Gorka spoke on GB News
GB NEWS
“He did four rallies yesterday, finishing his last one at 02.30am”, he said.
“He has done over 230 campaign events. He sat down without a potty break for three hours with Joe Rogan while Kamala Harris was in hiding.
“Kamala Harris spent 16 minutes on stage at his last rally. I’m 25 years younger than my former boss, if I had a quarter of his energy, I would be very happy.
“I don’t know how he does it. The gene pool of German-Irish-Scottish is unstoppable. This man is like a truck. He is like a freight train, he is unstoppable.
Kamala Harris, Donald TrumpReuters
“He has one mission, to save America from those dismantling it as we speak.”
Trump’s opponent, Kamala Harris, has described herself as the underdog of the race, telling a crowd in Philadelphia she was ready to channel her inner Rocky by “climbing to victory”.
"The momentum is on our side," Harris told a crowd that chanted back, "We will win."
"Tonight, then, we finish as we started: with optimism, with energy, with joy," Harris said, predicting one of the closest elections in U.S. history.
Trump led his fourth and final rally after midnight before a packed arena in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
He promoted his dedication to tackling the border crisis while attacking the economic record of the Biden-Harris years.