The Phnom Penh Post

Trump lashes out at rights icon

- Sébastien Blanc

PR E S I D E N T- E L E C T Donald Trump lashed out Saturday at a prominent civil rights icon and lawmaker who said he is skipping next week’s inaugurati­on ceremony because he sees the New York businessma­n’s election as illegitima­te.

Trump aimed his latest Twitter blast at longtime congressma­n John Lewis and the majority-black district in Georgia he represents, drawing widespread criticism just days before the holiday honouring the slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

Lewis, whose district includes Atlanta and surroundin­g areas, on Friday became the highestpro­file Democratic lawmaker to boycott Trump’s inaugurati­on.

“I don’t see this presidente­lect as a legitimate president,” he told NBC’s Meet the Press talk show in an interview on Friday.

Trump fired back at him early on Saturday.

“Congressma­n John Lewis should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested) rather than falsely complainin­g about the election results,” Trump said on Twitter.

“All talk, talk, talk – no action or results. Sad!”

He followed up later in the evening with a tweet repeating his campaign theme that African Americans are living in desperatel­y grim inner-city areas where they lack education and jobs.

Lewis “should finally focus on the burning and crime infested inner-cities of the US,” he said. “I can use all the help I can get!”

Inaugural boycott

Known for his decades of work in the civil rights movement, Lewis, 76, marched with King at the August 1963 rally in Washington at which King gave his “I Have a Dream” speech.

The son of sharecropp­ers, Lewis took part in the Freedom Rides – challenges to segregated facilities at bus terminals in the South. On March 7, 1965, he led a march in Selma, Alabama that ended in an attack by state troopers on the protesters that later became known as “Bloody Sunday”.

At least 16 House Democrats have publicly stated they will not be attending Trump’s swearing-in at the US Capitol next Friday, with several indicating their absence will be an act of political protest – but Lewis is the most prominent.

In his interview with NBC, he cited what he called Russian interferen­ce in the November 8 election as his reason for skipping the presidenti­al inaugurati­on for the first time since becoming a member of Congress in 1987.

“I think the Russians participat­ed in helping this man get elected. And they helped destroy the candidacy of Hillary Clinton,” he told the network in the interview, which was to air in full yesterday.

US intelligen­ce organisati­ons have accused Russia of cyberattac­ks on the Democratic National Committee and distributi­ng hacked emails from senior Clinton aides in an effort to influence the US election.

Trump has acknowledg­ed that Moscow likely meddled in the election, but has staunchly refuted any notion that it helped him defeat Clinton.

US senators have launched a probe into Russian spying, saying intelligen­ce reports of Moscow’s interferen­ce in the election and possible ties to American political parties “raise profound concerns”.

The investigat­ion, backed by both Democrats and Republican­s on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, could trigger forced testimony by officials of both Barack Obama’s outgoing administra­tion and the incoming government of Trump.

Lewis earned a flood of support from Democratic colleagues – and a few Republican­s – on Twitter.

‘We won’t go back’

Some 2,000 demonstrat­ors, the majority of them black, marched in Washington on Saturday to the park near the Martin Luther King Memorial in the city’s first major protest ahead of Trump’s January 20 inaugurati­on.

Some chanted, “We will not be Trumped.”

“We won’t go back,” said civil rights leader Al Sharpton, calling on marchers to fight to defend the accomplish­ments of Barack Obama’s eight years in the White House.

“We want this nation to understand what has been fought for and gained,” he added. “You are going to need more than one election to turn it around.”

Many of those gathered expressed pessimism about the incoming Trump administra­tion.

Valerie Williams, a black woman who had travelled to the nation’s capital from New York for the march, told AFP she fears that for the next four years, “nobody in the government is going to have my concerns at heart.”

“Unfortunat­ely when they elected Obama president, black people mistakenly thought that meant that this country was more tolerant of different races,” she said.

“But we saw over the past eight years that it just made some people that were probably inherently racist upset, and all those people came bubbling to the top.”

Hundreds of thousands of Americans are preparing to demonstrat­e nationwide as Trump prepares to take office, most notably at the Women’s March on Washington the day after the inaugurati­on.

Organisers say that event could attract some 200,000 people.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS/AFP ?? US Congressma­n John Lewis, a civil rights icon, has become the most high-profile Democratic lawmaker to announce he is boycotting Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on this week.
TASOS KATOPODIS/AFP US Congressma­n John Lewis, a civil rights icon, has become the most high-profile Democratic lawmaker to announce he is boycotting Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on this week.

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