Chicago Sun-Times

TRUMP AIMS TO DIVIDE WORKING, POOR PEOPLE

- JESSE JACKSON Follow Jesse Jackson on Twitter: @ RevJ Jackson Email: jjackson@rainbowpus­h.org

Symbols are important. Donald Trump, whose fortune is built upon a brand, and whose presidenti­al campaign brandished symbols far more than reform ideas, knows that well.

When Trump tweets his regret that the removal of “beautiful statues and monuments” commemorat­ing the Confederac­y subverts “the history and culture of our great country,” he knows the message he is sending.

As Eric Foner, the eminent historian of the CivilWar period, writes in the New York Times, statutes to Confederat­e leaders “say a lot more about the time they were erected than the historical era they evoke.” The first great surge of Confederat­e monuments came in the 1890s as segregatio­n — legalized apartheid— was being enforced across the South. The second wave came in the 1920s, marking the height of segregatio­n and of lynching. The third wave came in the 1950 and ’ 60s in reaction to the civil rights movement.

Foner cites historian Carl Becker, who wrote that “history is what the present choose to remember about the past.” It is not surprising that the symbols of segregatio­n and white supremacy, of succession and sedition now are under attack. Trump’s decision to tout the symbols of the Confederac­y sends a message that is clear to everyone.

What is particular­ly vicious about the Trump presidency is that his embrace of the symbols of oppression is accompanie­d by policies that push the substance of oppression. His Justice Department sides with voter suppressio­n, not voting rights. It pushes for harsher criminal sentences in drug cases and abandons efforts to reform policing, despite the reality of entrenched, racially biased practices. His “health care reform” was in fact a wealth bill, designed to strip millions of low wage and elderly workers of health care in order to pay for tax breaks for the very few.

His budget— featuring deep cuts in support for public education, for Pell grants for needy students, for food stamps and affordable housing— savages programs for the vulnerable— disproport­ionately people of color— in order to offer up even more tax breaks for the corporatio­ns and the rich. His posturing on the “wall,” his Muslim travel ban and his ramping up of deportatio­ns back up his purposeful insults to Mexicans and Muslims during the presidenti­al campaign. Symbols and substance go together. There is no confusion about where Trump stands.

Trump’s symbolic posturing has offended convention­al opinion. Republican leaders such as Sen. Robert Corker of Tennessee have questioned not only whether Trump has the “competence” but also whether he has the “stability” to be president. Others have criticized Trump’s effort to equate neo- Nazis with those who protest against them

Addressing the symbols is important. Drawing the line against neo- Nazi movements is essential. The question, however, is whether the legislator­s continue to support Trump’s policies even as they express dismay about his divisive comments.

As he departed from the White House, Trump’s “strategist” Steve Bannon exposed what we know is the cynical strategy. Scorning the white supremacis­ts as “clowns,” Bannon revealed their utility: The longer Democrats “talk about identity politics, I got ’ em,” he told Robert Kuttner of the American Prospect. “I want them to talk about racism every day. If the left is focused on race and identity, and we go with economic nationalis­m, we can crush the Democrats.”

Throughout our history, cynical politician­s have used race- bait politics— dividing working and poor people from one another— to serve the powerful. Now, with inequality at obscene extremes, and the vast majority of Americans understand­ing that the rules of this economy have been rigged, it isn’t surprising that someone with Trump’s agenda would seek to fan the flames of racial division.

Dr. Martin Luther King argued, “The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice.” That isn’t inevitable. It depends upon the active engagement of people of conscience working to make this a more perfect nation, with liberty and justice for all. Now more than ever, we need a new justice movement, turning back the efforts to divide us in both symbols and substance.

 ?? | AP/ SUN- TIMES ILLUSTRATI­ON ?? The statue of Confederat­e Army of Northern Virginia Gen. Robert E. Lee stands in Emacapatio­n Park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, on Friday.
| AP/ SUN- TIMES ILLUSTRATI­ON The statue of Confederat­e Army of Northern Virginia Gen. Robert E. Lee stands in Emacapatio­n Park in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, on Friday.
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