Dayton Daily News

GOP must move past being just party of white people

- Mona Charen She writes for Creators Syndicate.

In the nanosecond between Donald Trump’s foot-in-mouth moments this week, just before he made headlines by announcing changes in the topless blender that is his senior staff, he gave what many consider to be the finest speech of the campaign. Major Garrett of CBS tweeted, “Having been listening since august 2015, objectivel­y best drafted & best delivered (Trump) speech of campaign. Will resonate.” Byron York of the Washington Examiner, while acknowledg­ing some of Trump’s critics’ objections, thought Trump delivered a “focused, powerful, and discipline­d speech ... focused largely on problems that disproport­ionately afflict black Americans, arguing that his proposals on crime, immigratio­n, trade, jobs, education, and other issues will improve African-American lives more than Hillary Clinton’s.”

Donald Trump is polling near zero among African-Americans in key swing states. Republican­s struggle with this demographi­c, and I’ve written frequently about the Democrats’ despicable use of race to stoke fear among blacks in order to win votes.

While it may shock regular readers of this column to see these next words, there were some good points in Trump’s speech. He urged African-Americans to consider that Democratic policies have not yielded solutions but rather “more crime, more broken homes and more poverty.” (Actually, crime fell even in big cities starting in the 1990s, but it remains too high.) He argued that those who advance the “narrative of cops as a racist force in our society — a narrative supported with a nod by my opponent — share directly in the responsibi­lity for the unrest in Milwaukee, and many other places within our country.”

There are a few reasons to think this message will not resonate with black voters. Start with the venue: The speech was delivered not in Milwaukee to a black audience but in West Bend, a suburb 25 miles away. The audience was nearly all white.

Second, while black voters have not received much direct incoming fire from Trump’s flamethrow­er, they doubtless recall that one of Trump’s forays into conspiracy-mongering concerned Barack Obama’s birth certificat­e. Some on the right (this columnist included) chafe at the suggestion that all criticism of Obama is thinly veiled racism. But birtherism is probably just that.

It’s perverse to imagine that blacks will not have their radar activated when Trump relentless­ly derides other minorities. An attack on one minority group — Hispanics have been one of Trump’s preferred targets — is threatenin­g to all.

This election, as calamitous as it will be for many fine candidates, will not have been entirely in vain if it serves to bury the idea — beloved even of many nonTrump Republican­s — that the party can win national elections without broadening its appeal to minorities and women. Every precious American tradition, from religious liberty to free speech to free markets to national security, depends upon convincing more Hispanics, Asians and African-Americans to oppose the policies of the Democrats.

This was the year when it would have been relatively easy to do. Hillary Clinton is Imelda Marcos in a pantsuit. The nomination of Trump was the greatest act of self-sabotage by a political party in American history. The Republican Party may not survive it, but if it does, it will be because it stopped signaling that it was the party of white people and got back to being the party of Lincoln.

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