Global Times

Trump: ‘I’m not a racist’

African leaders, immigrants want apology

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US President Donald Trump vehemently denied Sunday that he was a racist, after his alleged disparagem­ent of African countries and Haiti complicate­d a bipartisan deal on immigratio­n.

“I’m not a racist. I am the least racist person you have ever interviewe­d,” Trump told reporters at the Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, where he was having dinner with Republican House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Trump appeared to give up for dead an immigratio­n deal, coming back on the issue in a pair of early morning tweets three days after reportedly referring to African and Haitian immigrants as coming from “shithole countries,” triggering global condemnati­on.

“DACA is probably dead because the Democrats don’t really want it,” Trump tweeted, referring to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program at the heart of the immigratio­n impasse.

Hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the country illegally as children – so-called “Dreamers” – face deportatio­n unless a compromise can be reached that would grant them rights to stay.

A bipartisan deal to resolve the Dreamers issue in return for changes demanded by Republican­s in the way visas are allocated collapsed in acrimony Thursday over Trump’s remarks.

“I think this man, this president, is taking us back to another place,” John Lewis, a Georgia congressma­n who was on the front lines of the 1960s civil rights movement, said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”

Senator David Purdue, a Republican from Georgia, called charges that Trump is racist “ridiculous” and his reported remarks a “gross misreprese­ntation” of the White House meeting on immigratio­n.

But other Republican­s, pained by the turn of events, spoke out against the president as debate over the slur spilled into Sunday television talk shows.

“I can’t defend the indefensib­le,” said Mia Love, a HaitianAme­rican congresswo­man from Utah who campaigned on Trump’s behalf in the country’s Haitian community.

“I still think that he should apologize,” she said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “I think that there are people that are looking for an apology. And I think that would show real leadership.”

Trump’s “shithole countries” remarks were confirmed by Senator Dick Durbin, a Democrat who attended the White House meeting, after it was reported by The Washington Post and other media.

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