The Mercury

Trump stokes racial tension

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US PRESIDENT Donald Trump is wielding America’s racial tensions as a re-election weapon, fiercely denouncing the racial justice movement on a near-daily basis with language stoking white resentment and aiming to drive his supporters to the polls.

The incendiary discourse is alarming many in his own party and running contrary to the advice of some in his inner circle, who believe it risks alienating independen­t and suburban voters. It’s a pattern that harks back to cultural divisions Trump exploited in his victorious 2016 campaign.

“It’s not about who is the object of the derision or the vitriol. The actual issue is understand­ing the appeal to white resentment and white fear,” said Eddie Glaude, chair of the Department of African American studies at Princeton University. “It’s all rooted in this panic about the place of white people in this new America.”

Though Trump has

long

aired racially divisive language and grievances in the public sphere, his willingnes­s to do so from behind the presidenti­al seal – and on his Twitter account – has reached a breakneck pace in recent days as the nation grapples with racial injustice.

The Republican president tweeted – and later deleted – a video of a supporter yelling “white power”. He referred to the Black Lives Matter mantra as a “symbol of hate”.

He took a swipe at Nascar for removing the Confederat­e flag from its races and falsely suggested a black driver had carried out a racially charged hoax.

He mused about overturnin­g a suburban fair-housing regulation and spoke approvingl­y of the current branding of the Washington Redskins and the Cleveland Indians, team nicknames that many consider offensive to Native Americans.

Most notably, he has engaged in a full-throated defence of the Confederat­e legacy, which he at times has cloaked within tributes to the Founding Fathers, including during a pair of high-profile Fourth of July weekend speeches.

“Those who seek to erase our heritage want Americans to forget our pride and our great dignity, so that we can no longer understand ourselves or America’s destiny,” Trump said on Friday at the base of Mount Rushmore.

“In toppling the heroes of 1776, they seek to dissolve the bonds of love and loyalty that we feel for our country, and that we feel for each other. Their goal is not a better America; their goal is the end of America.”

In defending Thomas Jefferson and George Washington that night, Trump did not mention the Confederac­y. Instead, he painted racial justice demonstrat­ors with a broad brush that made no distinctio­n between the many who oppose honouring the

Confederac­y and the relative few who question celebratin­g founders who owned slaves.

But Trump has repeatedly called for the preservati­on of statues of the Confederac­y and the names of its generals on military bases – all assailed in the protests that have swept from coast to coast in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd.

His comments are an apparent descendant, a half-century later, of Richard Nixon’s coded outreach to white voters known as the Southern Strategy. Trump himself has embraced Nixon’s phrase “the Silent Majority” to describe his own supporters.

By all accounts, the president’s actions are, at times, born of impulse and an instinctiv­e reaction to what he sees on television. However, according to current and former Trump campaign officials, his overarchin­g strategy is an appeal to white voters – some of them racist.

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