Why Do Politicians Always Say 'I'm Not the Enemy'?

Imagine you're playing a game with your friends. You say, 'I'm not the enemy,' but you're actually trying to make it look like someone else is the problem. Politicians do something similar when they talk, they use words to make it seem like someone else is at fault instead of themselves. That way, people might still like them even if things go wrong.

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Examples

  1. A politician says 'I'm not the enemy' after a major policy fails.
  2. During a debate, a candidate claims they're not the enemy but the other side is.
  3. A leader tells their supporters that they're not the enemy, it's just the opposition.

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