Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

A vote for Trump is vote for racism

- Eugene Robinson is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group. Eugene Robinson

Bring it on. If President Trump and the Republican Party want the 2020 election to be a referendum on unabashed white supremacy, then that’s their choice. Voters who embrace the views of David Duke and other proud racists will have Trump to vote for. Voters who disagree will have a Democratic alternativ­e. Simple as that.

At the moment, it is hard to see the coming contest in any other light. “Make America Great Again” has completed its sinister transforma­tion into “Make America White Again,” and it’s foolish to pretend otherwise.

No sensible person should want such a fight. In such a sprawling, diverse nation as ours, with such a long and troubled history on issues of race, a certain amount of pretense is necessary. We try to bury our ugliest fears and resentment­s beneath a nobler commitment to the pluralisti­c ideals enshrined in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on. At our best, we subsume our private prejudices beneath a sense of civic responsibi­lity.

But Donald Trump is no sensible person, and he obviously does not represent our best. He is a demagogue with one highly effective political move: driving wedges. He is now trying to open a chasm between white and nonwhite Americans, and he wants to force his potential supporters to choose a side.

I hope and expect that Trump’s race-baiting will fail — but hope and expectatio­ns are not enough. His shamefully divisive tactic must be called out, labeled with its proper name and fought without quarter. Based on Trump’s public comments and his Twitter feed, it seems obvious that race is what he wants the nation to be talking about right now, as opposed to his administra­tion’s incompeten­ce and corruption. But to ignore his white-power tactic would be a much bigger mistake than facing it head-on. Trump may believe his political opponents lack the stomach to confront him. He must be proven wrong.

Trump has chosen as his foils four first-term members of Congress — Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., Ilhan Omar, DMinn., and Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass. — who all, not coincident­ally, happen to be women of color. The president has demanded they “go back” to the countries they came from (all but Omar, a naturalize­d citizen, were born in the United States) and claimed they have no right to express their progressiv­e views.

Last week, at a campaign rally in North Carolina, Trump was blasting Omar, who came to this country as a refugee from Somalia, when the crowd began a shocking chant: “Send her back! Send her back!” Before continuing his speech, the president paused to let the chant gather force and then gradually die out.

Members of the White House staff reportedly were appalled — but nobody quit in protest. Republican­s in Congress reportedly were aghast — but almost all of them refused to directly criticize the president.

After making the perfunctor­y (and apparently false) claim that he disliked the chant, Trump went on to amplify it. He demanded that those who do not love the United States — by which he clearly means his vision of the country — should leave it. On Sunday, he tweeted, “I don’t believe the four Congresswo­men are capable of loving our Country. They should apologize to America.” On Monday, he called them “a very Racist group of troublemak­ers.”

This will surely be a theme of Trump’s white-power appeal — that minorities who have the nerve to raise their voices are the “real” racists who should be blamed for any and all hardships afflicting whites. It is incredible that our national political discourse has sunk to this kind of hideous scapegoati­ng, but here we are.

Democrats, independen­ts and Republican­s disgusted by Trump’s use of race as a wedge cannot pretend this is a normal election. Republican officehold­ers and candidates who stand by Trump, perhaps for reasons of self-preservati­on, must be pressed: Do they believe all Americans, regardless of race, have a right to participat­e in our democracy, or not? Do they believe Americans who disagree with Trump’s policies should leave the country, or not? Do they agree with white supremacis­ts that whites are somehow threatened by “racist” minorities, or not?

Anyone tempted to support Trump because of his economic or foreign policies should be constantly reminded that this is not an a-la-carte menu. If you plan to vote for Trump because of his tax cuts, for example, or his uncritical support of Israel, you’re also voting for his racism.

This is nothing less than a fight for the soul of the nation. Everyone needs to take a stand.

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