Khaleej Times

I’m not a racist, says President Trump

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US President Donald Trump vehemently denied on Sunday that he was a racist, after his vulgar 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, which were widely denounced as racist.

“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.” “I think he is a racist.” 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 Haitian-American 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 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.

But Trump has stuck with a vague denial that he used such language, and so far has made no move to apologize, hurting prospects for a deal on DACA and making life uncomforta­ble for Republican­s as they look ahead to midterm elections this year.

The president sought to shift from the defensive by portraying Democrats as not truly interested in an immigratio­n deal.

“They just want to talk and take desperatel­y needed money away from our Military,” he tweeted.

“I, as President, want people coming into our Country who are going to help us become strong and great again, people coming in through a system based on MERIT. No more Lotteries! #AMERICA FIRST.”

In Florida, Trump added: “I don’t think Democrats want to make a deal. The folks from DACA should know the Democrats are the ones that aren’t going to make a deal.”

He insisted the White House was “ready, willing and able to make a deal on DACA.”

But Senator Jeff Flake, a Republican who has been critical of Trump, said Democrats were serious about a bipartisan deal on immigratio­n.

He said the compromise presented to the White House Thursday would end a visa lottery system and so-called chain migration under which legal immigrants can bring in family members. The Dreamers would be allowed to stay but not become US citizens, according to Flake.

The senator from Arizona said Trump’s remarks came in reaction to an element of the deal that would reallocate the visas given out in a lottery to immigrants who are currently in a protected status, like Haitians and the Dreamers.

Trump announced in September he was scrapping the DACA program but delayed enforcemen­t to give Congress six months — until March — to craft a lasting solution.

I, as President, want people coming into our Country who are going to help us become strong and great again, people coming in through a system based on MERIT. No more Lotteries! #AMERICA FIRST Donald Trump

 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump arrives for a dinner with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (left) at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida. —
AP President Donald Trump arrives for a dinner with House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (left) at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida. —
 ?? AFP file ?? Protesters at a rally in support of the DACA and TPS programmes, near Washington. —
AFP file Protesters at a rally in support of the DACA and TPS programmes, near Washington. —

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