Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Omar calls Carlson ‘ racist fool’ after he says she ‘ hates this country’

- By Alex Horton

On his Tuesday program, Fox News host Tucker Carlson praised an immigratio­n system that produced refugee-turned lawmaker Rep. Ilhan Omar, D- Minn. — then condemned her as “living proof that the way we practice immigratio­n has become dangerous to this country.”

Mr. Carlson, whose 2018 comment that immigrants make the United States “dirtier” triggered an advertiser pullout, spoke at length about a history of welcoming immigrants that contrasted with his earlier commentary that suggests perhaps too many have been welcomed.

His comments were threaded with Ms. Omar’s story. She fled the Somali civil war into a Kenyan refugee camp, and then arrived at age 12 in the United States, where she has said she found discrimina­tion and racism incompatib­le with the expectatio­ns of American idealism.

Now she’s one of the youngest members of Congress, a frequent critic of President Donald Trump, and as Mr. Carlson put it, “one of the most powerful women in America.”

Mr. Carlson used her success as evidence of a welcoming spirit for immigrants.

“Americans like to help. It makes us feel good,” Mr. Carlson said. “Some of our deepest satisfacti­on as a country comes from watching penniless immigrants arrive on our shores, buy into our values, and thrive. We call it the American Dream.”

But then Mr. Carlson described Ms. Omar as not sufficient­ly thankful for her success in the country. “Omar has an awful lot to be grateful for,” he said. “But she isn’t grateful ... she hates this country more than ever.”

Ms. Omar ripped Mr. Carlson on Twitter following the segment.

“Not gonna lie, it’s kind of fun watching a racist fool like this weeping about my presence in Congress,” she wrote, adding laughing emoji. “No lies will stamp out my love for this country or my resolve to make our union more perfect. They will just have to get used to calling me Congresswo­man!”

In the program, Mr. Carlson described Ms. Omar as a threat.

“She has undisguise­d contempt for the United States and for its people,” Mr. Carlson said. “That should worry you, and not just because Omar is now a sitting member of Congress. Ilhan Omar is living proof that the way we practice immigratio­n has become dangerous to this country. A system designed to strengthen America is instead underminin­g it.”

Mr. Carlson bolstered his claims with a recent profile of Ms. Omar published in The Washington Post. He read one portion on air:

“In Omar’s version, America wasn’t the bighearted country that saved her from a brutal war and a bleak refugee camp. It wasn’t a meritocrac­y that helped her attend college or vaulted her into Congress. Instead, it was the country that had failed to live up to its founding ideals, a place that had disappoint­ed her and so many immigrants, refugees and minorities like her.”

In March, a wave of radio show recordings from 2008 that were resurfaced by a liberal group featured Mr. Carlson making racist, sexist and homophobic statements, which included Mr. Carlson calling Iraqis “semilitera­te primitive monkeys.”

Iraq is part of the Trump administra­tion’s travel ban that restricts immigratio­n from several Muslim- majority nations, including Somalia, where Ms. Omar was born.

Mr. Carlson did not mention the travel ban but appeared to connect Ms. Omar’s origin to an immigratio­n policy prescripti­on.

“Maybe we are importing people from places who are simply antithetic­al to ours,” he said, describing Ms. Omar.

More restrictio­ns appeared to be on Mr. Carlson’s mind. But he conceded he did not know what, exactly, had troubled him.

“Who knows what the problem is,” he said.

Following news reports of the exchange, Mr. Trump amplified to his 61.8 million followers an attack on Ms. Omar from conservati­ve commentato­r Mark Levin.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite/ Associated Press ?? Rep. Ilhan Omar, D- Minn., listens during an event June 24 outside the Capitol in Washington.
J. Scott Applewhite/ Associated Press Rep. Ilhan Omar, D- Minn., listens during an event June 24 outside the Capitol in Washington.

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