Chattanooga Times Free Press

HOW NOT TO INSULT TRUMP

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Maybe we should stop talking about Donald Trump being a racist. He seems to love the idea too much.

“I think I’m winning,” he told reporters as he left for a rally Wednesday.

As the whole world now knows, the president was widely denounced for saying a quartet of young minority congresswo­men, known as the squad, should go back to “the crime infested places from which they came.”

That would, in one case, have been Cincinnati. But the message was that if you were nonwhite, you must be some kind of foreigner. It was pretty clear to a lot of Americans that telling people to go back where they came from was a racist trope. Trump said he didn’t care. And, of course, he didn’t.

In fact, he now seems to be running for re-election against the squad. “These left-wing ideologues see our nation as a force of evil,” he told the cheering crowd in North Carolina on Wednesday night, launching into a hot assault on Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota while the crowd yelled “Send her back!”

It was an echo of the “Lock her up!” chants Trump elicited when he was ranting about Hillary Clinton. Who was a presidenti­al nominee. Omar is a lawmaker who has been in office about six months.

The whole White House team has been talking about the squad. Presidenti­al adviser Kellyanne Conway on Tuesday claimed they represente­d “a dark underbelly in this country.”

People, if you were genuinely trying to tamp down a crisis over a president’s racist remarks about minority members of Congress, would you use the term “dark underbelly”? And are you surprised Kellyanne Conway is still around? Trump cannot hang onto a Cabinet member for more than five minutes, but she’s apparently got lifetime tenure.

The squad is not actually a group, but they share a generally left worldview. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York talks a lot about socialism. Omar and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan have both been very critical of Israel. Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts wants to defund ICE. Now Trump is eager to run against them instead of the actual Democratic Party.

And, of course, throwing in a lot of immigrant-bashing is just fine. You may conceivabl­y remember that he got elected on a send-them-back-where-they-came-from campaign.

Trump made it clear this week that he is utterly indifferen­t to all the charges of immigrant-bashing and racism. And Republican politician­s, desperate not to put any daylight between themselves and the president’s base, instantly began portraying the squad — four relatively powerless junior members of the House — as terrible threats to national security. Lindsey Graham called them “a bunch of communists.”

Other minions were less hysterical in their defensiven­ess, although no more charming. “I think we’re going way beyond the pale right now. They talk about people of color. I’m a person of color. I’m white. I’m an Anglo-Saxon,” said Rep. Mike Kelly of Pennsylvan­ia.

Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff argued that Trump couldn’t possibly be racist since he had a Cabinet member “who came to the United States as a child, unable to speak English, learned English, and eventually became a naturalize­d citizen.” That would be Secretary of Transporta­tion Elaine Chao, the wife of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Otherwise, the Trump Cabinet is virtually minority-free except for, my God, Ben Carson. Alex Acosta, the labor secretary, had to ditch his job after the world learned of his unhelpful prosecutor­ial role in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.

“He’s a Hispanic man,” said Trump, rather unnecessar­ily, as Acosta stood next to him for the departure announceme­nt. “Hispanic, which I so admire because maybe it was a little tougher for him and maybe not.”

Is that all completely clear? Acosta was, by virtually anybody’s standard, a terrible labor secretary. But he’s welcome to move right over to a cushy job in the private sector. Certainly nobody wants him to go back to wherever he came from.

 ??  ?? Gail Collins
Gail Collins

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