Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

It’s time to end the denial about Trump

- EJ Dionne Columnist E.J. Dionne is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group. His email address is ejdionne@ washpost.com.

E.J. Dionne: It should not have taken the death and injury of innocents to move our nation toward moral clarity.

It should not have taken the death and injury of innocents to move our nation toward moral clarity. It should not have taken President Trump’s disgracefu­l refusal to condemn white supremacy, bigotry and Nazism to make clear to all who he is and which dark impulses he is willing to exploit to maintain his hold on power.

Those of us who are white regularly insist that the racists and bigots are a minority of us and that the white-power movement is a marginal and demented faction.

This is true, and the mayhem in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, called forth passionate condemnati­ons of blood-and-soil nationalis­m across the spectrum of ideology. These forms of witness were a necessary defense of the American idea and underscore­d the shamefulne­ss of Trump’s embrace of moral equivalenc­e. There are not, as Trump insisted Saturday, “many sides” to questions that were settled long ago: Racism, anti-Semitism, discrimina­tion and white supremacy are unequivoca­lly wrong.

A president who cannot bring himself to say this immediatel­y and unequivoca­lly squanders any claim to moral leadership.

Advisers to the president tried to clean up after this moral failure, putting out a statement Sunday morning — attributed to no one — declaring that “of course” his condemnati­on of violence “includes white supremacis­ts, KKK, neo-Nazi and all extremist groups.” But if that “of course” is sincere, why didn’t Trump say these things in the first place? And why hang on to the president’s inexcusabl­e moral equivalenc­e by adding that phrase “and all extremist groups”? This was simply a weak philosophi­cal cover-up for a politician who has shown us his real instincts throughout his public life, from his birtherism to his reluctance to turn away 2016 endorsemen­ts from Klansmen and other racists.

More Republican­s than usual broke with Trump after his anemic response, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, was especially poignant in offering historical perspectiv­e on this episode: “My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas to go unchalleng­ed here at home.”

But that so many others in the party preferred to keep their discomfort on background was itself a scandal. “I can’t tell you how sick & tired I am of the ‘privately wincing’ Republican­s,” Peter Wehner, a veteran of two Republican administra­tions, tweeted. “It’s a self-incriminat­ing silence.” Yes, it is.

The proper response is for Democrats and Republican­s willing to take a stand to force a vote in Congress condemning the president for his opportunis­tic obtuseness and making clear where the vast majority of Americans stand on white supremacy. This is important for many reasons, but especially to send a message to America’s minorities that whites are willing to do more than offer rote condemnati­ons of racism.

For make no mistake: No matter how accurate it is to say that neo-Nazis and Klansmen represent a repugnant fringe, the fact that our president has consistent­ly and successful­ly exploited white racial resentment cannot help but be taken by citizens of color as a sign of racism’s stubborn durability.

The backlash to racial progress is an old American story, from the end of Reconstruc­tion forward. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s words from 1967 speak to us still: “Loose and easy language about equality, resonant resolution­s about brotherhoo­d fall pleasantly on the ear, but for the Negro, there is a credibilit­y gap he cannot overlook. He remembers that with each modest advance the white population promptly raises the argument that the Negro has come far enough. Each step forward accents an everpresen­t tendency to backlash.” This is what we saw this weekend.

The battles over Confederat­e monuments, in Charlottes­ville and elsewhere, reflect our difficulty in acknowledg­ing that these memorials are less historical markers than political statements. Many were erected explicitly in support of Jim Crow and implicitly to deny the truth that the Southern cause in the Civil War was built around a defense of slavery. Taking them down is an acknowledg­ement of what history teaches, not an eradicatio­n of the past.

But history is also being made now. As is always true with Trump, self-interest is the most efficient explanatio­n for his actions: Under pressure from the Russia investigat­ion, he is reluctant to alienate backlash voters, who are among his most loyal supporters.

The rest of us, however, have a larger obligation to our country and to racial justice. As the late civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer might suggest, it is time to ask about Trump: When will we become sick and tired of being sick and tired?

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