Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The ultimate hypocrisy: Illegal immigrant labor used at Trump’s golf club

- Esther J. Cepeda

Since President Trump is so fond of giving his political nemeses pet names, allow me to give him one, too: Teflon Don. Nothing sticks to this guy.

He said it himself back in 2016: “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters.”

And if he were to say today, “I could employ illegal immigrants even though I say I’m tough on immigratio­n,” his most ardent supporters wouldn’t blink twice.

Hiring undocument­ed immigrants, of course, has been an unforgivab­le political sin — it derailed the nomination­s of two candidates for attorney general in 1993 (Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood), two nomination­s for labor secretary (Linda Chavez in 2001 and Andrew Puzder in 2017), and a pick for homeland security secretary in 2004 (Bernard Kerik). Today, employing people who are residing in the country illegally would surely torpedo the careers of most incumbents or candidates for office.

But few Trump supporters were rushing to point out the president’s hypocrisy when The New York Times reported last week that unlawfully present immigrants were working on phony employment documents at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

Make no mistake about it, if President Obama had done the same thing during his tenure, he would have been run out of the White House on a rail by an angry mob.

Yet when Trump does anything that directly undermines his campaign promises, his base always seems to find a way to turn it around.

“No good deed goes unpunished, even when the beneficiar­y is in the country illegally,” wrote Eddie Scarry, a conservati­ve opinion writer for The Washington Examiner, in reference to reports that the housekeepe­rs who came forward about working with fake documents said Trump had tipped them generously.

Scarry didn’t grapple with the threatenin­g and demeaning comments that Victorina Morales said she faced from her immediate supervisor­s because they knew she was working illegally.

In Scarry’s assessment, the salient fact was that a prominent publicatio­n had the gall to elevate the undocument­ed women’s stories, not the fact that Trump’s golf club is allegedly hiring unlawfully present immigrants for jobs that should, in Trump’s stated vision of the U.S. workforce, go to lawful permanent residents and native-born workers.

According to Morales and another worker, Sandra Diaz, supervisor­s wielded their power by simultaneo­usly helping employees obtain fake work documentat­ion from other employees (sometimes even helping to pay for the false documents) so they could stay on the job, and by calling them “donkeys,” and “stupid illegal immigrants” with less intelligen­ce than a dog. There were also alleged threats of deportatio­n and, sometimes, physical force.

Morales took major risks to come forward but did so to stick up for others suffering in silence.

“We are tired of the abuse, the insults, the way (Trump) talks about us when he knows that we are here helping him make money,” Morales told the Times. “We sweat it out to attend to his every need and have to put up with his humiliatio­n.”

That humiliatio­n started back when Trump launched his presidenti­al campaign in 2015 by referring to immigrants south of the border as criminals and rapists.

Well, you have to hand it to him — when Trump made those comments, he also said of the immigrants that, “some, I assume, are good people.”

That’s surely how he thought of Morales, who was given both a certificat­e of outstandin­g service from the club and a special pin in the shape of an American flag bearing a Secret Service logo.

If this latest uncovering of the opportunis­tic, two-faced nature of our president teaches us anything, it’s that he’s right — in his most passionate supporters’ eyes, he can do no wrong. And no amount of evidence to the contrary will ever sway them to view him as the hypocrite everyone else sees.

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