The Daily Courier

Trump’s politicall­y slow walk to condemning white supremacis­ts

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WASHINGTON (AP) — It took President Donald Trump three days to do what should have come fast and easy.

In his carefully worded statement Monday, Trump condemned members of the Ku Klux Klan, neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts as “repugnant.” He vowed that his administra­tion would crack down on those who perpetrate “racist violence.” He called for national unity.

It was the type of statement Americans have come to expect from their presidents after racially charged incidents, like the deadly violence that erupted Saturday in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. But Trump struggled mightily to meet the moment, glaringly omitting any direct condemnati­on of white supremacis­ts in his initial comments on the incident and decrying bigotry “on many sides.”

As the most unconventi­onal president in modern U.S. history, Trump has at times thrived off low expectatio­ns.

He is often cheered by Republican­s and some political moments when he fulfills basic functions of the office. And GOP lawmakers in particular have often tried to explain away his missteps as a function of his lack of experience in Washington and politics.

But he has found himself with few allies after his botched handling of the Charlottes­ville violence. Several Republican­s challenged Trump directly to be more strident in calling out white nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis. Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner said the president needed to “step up” and call the groups “evil.”

The president got to that place on Monday, declaring that “racism is evil, and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs.”

It’s unclear whether his cleanup efforts will ease the political pressure he has faced in recent days. In addition to the disapprova­l from his own party, a member of a White House advisory council — Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier — announced that he was resigning from the panel in protest.

The trouble for Trump is that his struggle in responding to the Charlottes­ville violence seems to fit a pattern of uncharacte­ristic caution when it comes to handling racial tensions and condemning the fringe groups that have rallied around his candidacy.

Indeed, it was striking that one of the few signs of support for Trump after his comments Saturday came from the white supremacis­t website Daily Stormer. The website noted that Trump avoided reporters’ questions about whether he condemned the groups leading the protests. “Really, really good. God bless him,” the website wrote.

Trump denies that he’s racist or sympatheti­c to such groups. Son-in-law Jared Kushner, the grandson of Holocaust survivors, and daughter Ivanka, who converted to Judaism, are among those who have defended the president against those charges.

Still, he has a history of engaging in high-profile, racially fraught battles.

Early in his career as a developer, Trump fought charges of bias against blacks seeking to rent at his family-owned apartment complexes. He long promoted the lie that the nation’s first black president, Barack Obama, was not born in the United States.

As a candidate, he proposed temporaril­y banning Muslims from the U.S.

He retweeted a post from accounts that appeared to have ties to white nationalis­t groups. And he was slow to reject the endorsemen­t of former KKK leader David Duke.

Some of the president’s friends and advisers have argued that Trump is simply refusing to bend to liberals’ desire for political correctnes­s. A boastful, proudly disruptive politician, Trump often has been rewarded for saying impolite and impolitic things. Some supporters cheer him for being someone who says what they cannot.

Democrats frequently assert that Trump sees a political advantage in courting the support of the far right. Indeed, he has benefited politicall­y from the backing of media outlets such as Breitbart or InfoWars. They have consistent­ly promoted Trump and torn down his opponents, sometimes with biased or inaccurate reports.

Charlottes­ville’s mayor, Democrat Mike Signer, said Sunday that Trump made a choice during his campaign to “go right to the gutter, to play on our worst prejudices.”

“I think you are seeing a direct line from what happened here this weekend to those choices,” Signer said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

White House senior adviser Steve Bannon ran Breitbart before joining Trump’s campaign, and several of the president’s other aides believe Bannon continues to have influence over the website. In “Devil’s Bargain,” a new book about his role in the Trump campaign, Bannon is quoted as saying that attempts by Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton to tie Trump to the alt-right and nationalis­ts did not move voters.

“We polled the race stuff and it doesn’t matter,” Bannon said, according to the book.

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