Anger against racists
Trump under fire for not condemning right-wing demonstration
THE White House yesterday struggled to defuse growing criticism of President Donald Trump’s initial failure to explicitly condemn white supremacists for their role in a violent protest in Virginia on Saturday, insisting that his condemnation included all such groups.
A young woman died and 19 people were injured in the city of Charlottesville when a car plowed into a crowd of people after a rally by Ku Klux Klan members and other white nationalists turned violent.
Two state police officers died in a helicopter crash near the area.
A full day after the violence erupted, and after an initial statement in which Trump made no mention of white extremism, a White House spokesman said: “The president said very strongly yesterday that he condemns all forms of violence, bigotry and hatred. Of course that includes white supremacists, KKK, neo-Nazi and all extremist groups.”
In an appearance at his golf resort in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Saturday, Trump had vaguely faulted “many sides” for the violence – a phrase he then repeated.
He made no mention of the far-right militia groups involved in the Charlottesville melee, some of whom arrived armed, in camouflage and wearing Trump hats or T-shirts.
Amid growing bipartisan criticism of his initial response, White House advisers appear- ing on talk shows yester- day strove to defend the president.
White House homeland security adviser Tom Bossert said: “I think you saw the president stand up very clearly and not only denounce it, but rise to a presidential level of calling for a countermessage of love and dignity and respect for fellow human beings.”
But Charlottesville mayor Michael Signer laid much of the blame for the violence directly at the president’s feet, saying that Trump had created an atmosphere of “coarseness, cynicism [and] bullying”.
“He made a choice in his presidential campaign to go to the gutter, to play on our worst prejudices,” Signer, a Democrat, said.
“I think you’re seeing a direct line from what happened this weekend to those choices.”
Many Republicans joined in the criticism of Trump, including former presidential aspirants senators Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.
Another Republican, Senator Lindsey Graham, said: “I would urge the president to dissuade these groups that he’s their friend. Their cause is hate.”
Even the man who was briefly the White House communications director, Anthony Scaramucci, had critical words for Trump’s original response.
“I think he needed to be much harsher as it related to the white supremacists. It’s actually terrorism.”
Scaramucci was fired just 10 days into his job as communications director after the New Yorker published an obscenity-laced interview he had had with a reporter.
Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, issued a tweet early yesterday that included the language some people said her father should have used on Saturday. “There should be no place in society for racism, white supremacy and neo-Nazis,” she tweeted.
When Trump was asked on Saturday in Bedminster whether he wanted the support of white nationalists, he ignored the question.
He is expected to hold a media conference in Washington today at which the question is certain to arise.