Is that a Grammar Nazi's field of
battle expertise? Maybe if they mismatch their subject/objects... (And the run-on, hyperparenenthesised, mismatched and often wildly verbifying freeform-constructs from YouKnowWho would be a goldmine.)
Having subjected myself to Trump's speeches (and Hillary's, and the others when they still 'mattered' but, of all those, his are the bigger chore, by far), purely in the interests of knowing "what is going on", I am convinced that semi-live fact-checking would he useful, if impractical.
Even better if there was some way of putting up someone like a live-signer/interpreter beside (and perhaps slightly behind) them on the dais who could solely provide instantaneous
PolitiFact-like assessments. Call it an assistance to the Hard-Of-Judgement. But it'd be a hard job. And that's without the threat of lynching at a certain political rallies (definitely
his1...), but a superimposed corner-of-the-screen position is even more prone to Appeal To (Media) Conspiracy, by those who would wish to state as such. (Needs a special hard-coded "That's
their opinion, I am obliged to make no comment" signing reaction, perhaps.)
But I dislike the rally situations. I'd ignore them altogether if they weren't apparently part of the process. Proper adversarial question-and-answer sezsions with (or at least in the presence of) those not similarly polarised are what I'd prefer. And it is there where filler-phrases and diversions get most overused. In the UK, there's an annoying tendency to go with something like "And what I would say to you(, members of the audience, etc) is..." that doubles up as weasel-wording
2 but is also a fairly standard phrase useful for rolling out on automatic whilst the brain tries to mince the real meat of the answer into a pallatable form.
It used to be that "You ask <foo>, but the real question is <bar>, and my answer to that is...", here in the UK at least, but interviewers/chairpersons have become good at calling that out. Haven't seen a good Candidate vs. Candidate debate from the US recently, though, to compare with.
I actually don't mind the fact that live speaking transcripts wouldn't anywhere near pass muster if trying to submit them as a written response, and I can probably forgive minor thinkos in their content as well as ramble (no stranger to that, myself) but fiction-as-fact should be discouraged. Especially as not everybody is at all bothered at paying attention to rivalling echochambers and may well take home some pretty dire things as Gospel.
1 Free Speech is Free Speech, but the baying for blood at such
*ahem* loaded phrases as "And the Police would be
very happy about that", is the kind of worrying disregard for law and due process that is being spun. Playing the home crowd, like each candidate in their own partisanly-attended speeches, sure, but President Duterte probably wouldn't have the same mismatch of views with President Trump as with Obama if he continues that way
into office, and through it.
2 What they
would say to you, perhaps, with a caveat tacked on to make it look they didn't actually just say the thing you thought they just said if it ever becomes politically inconvenient to have done so, and to have been recorded doing so.