San Francisco Chronicle

Trump isn’t to blame. His entire party is.

- CATHERINE RAMPELL © 2018, Washington Post Writers Group Email: crampell@washpost.com. Twitter: @crampell.

The White House says it’s unfair to blame President Trump for our poisonous, increasing­ly violent political atmosphere. And you know what? They’re right.

Trump isn’t to blame. His entire party is. Because it never had the reckoning it needed after the 2016 election.

Last week saw three reprehensi­ble attacks motivated by far-right animus: pipe bombs sent to people on Trump’s ever-expanding enemies list; the murder of two African Americans at a Kentucky supermarke­t; and, at a Pittsburgh synagogue, the deadliest antiSemiti­c attack in U.S. history.

But Trump didn’t pull the trigger or make those bombs, Trump’s defenders point out. What’s more, the president has denounced bigotry and political violence. Well, he has sometimes. He has also sometimes dogwhistle­d conspiracy theories about a black president or a supposedly treasonous rich Internatio­nal Jew — both of whom were intended recipients of bombs last week.

Sometimes he’s explicitly praised those who engage in political, ethnic or anti-media assaults.

And sometimes he’s even appeared to blame their victims for provoking their own attacks by saying not-nice things about Dear Leader.

So yeah, it’s not unreasonab­le to believe that the man with the world’s biggest bullhorn could be at least contributi­ng to a climate in which hate crimes and anti-Semitic incidents are increasing. In fact, most Americans believe Trump’s actions as president have encouraged white supremacis­t groups, according to a new PRRI poll.

But in focusing our anger and debate on Trump, we let so many other Republican­s off the hook.

The president is hardly the only elected official who has played footsie with neo-Nazis, far-right thugs and xenophobic conspiracy theorists.

Why, earlier this year, Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., invited to the State of the Union a Holocaust denier who had also been banned from Twitter after appearing to threaten the life of a black civil rights activist. At the time, Gaetz said he didn’t know his guest’s ugly background.

Somehow, though, this same far-right hatemonger ended up at a Gaetz fundraiser last month.

More recently, Gaetz suggested that Jewish financier George Soros was funding a supposedly dangerous caravan of asylum-seeking refugees who plan to “storm” the U.S. border at “election time.”

Other Republican lawmakers — such as Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Tex., Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, and House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. — have dabbled in this or other dog-whistling conspiracy theories about Soros’ alleged efforts to subvert the United States.

And then we come to Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, whose good standing in the Republican Party should infuriate anyone who pretends to care about civility (looking at you, Paul Ryan and Jeff Flake).

Some things King has done just since this summer:

He endorsed a white supremacis­t running for mayor of Toronto, a woman who claims Canada is undergoing a “white genocide.”

He retweeted a self-described British neo-Nazi.

And while on a European trip arranged by a Holocaust memorial group, King met with members of a far-right Austrian party founded by a former Nazi SS officer. He told the party’s affiliated publicatio­n that he, too, feared a coming “Great Replacemen­t” of white European culture by “somebody else’s babies,” enabled by Hispanic and Muslim migration, in a plot orchestrat­ed by (guess who?) Soros.

When asked why he was palling around with European ethnonatio­nalists, King defended himself thusly: “If they were in America pushing the platform that they push, they would be Republican­s.” Yes. And that’s the problem. Maybe Republican­s will never turn on the standardbe­arer of their party, no matter how vile his words. The question is why they also refuse to police their less-powerful colleagues.

Why haven’t the Kings and Gaetzes of Congress been ejected from the caucus, or at least censured in some way, for encouragin­g ethnic hatred?

The answer, at least in part, is that the GOP learned all the wrong lessons from the 2016 election.

A Trump loss, as the polls predicted, might have taught Republican­s that they could no longer exclusivel­y cater to old, white, racially anxious men (as the 2012 GOP “autopsy” report warned). It might have forced Republican­s to stop indulging the crazy things that many in their base believed; it might have learned that all that Fox News fearmonger­ing was counterpro­ductive to actually being a governing party.

Instead, by the narrowest of margins, Trump managed to claim the White House. And the cost-benefit analysis for a Republican demagogue considerin­g saying something racist or incendiary — or for a partisan colleague contemplat­ing criticizin­g such — never changed.

In short, the GOP never cleaned house, and the mess just keeps getting worse.

 ?? Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images ?? People protest the arrival of President Trump as he visits the Tree of Life Congregati­on Tuesday in Pittsburgh, in the wake of a mass shooting at a synagogue that left 11 people dead. Protestors gathered near the Tree of Life synagogue, where the shooting took place, holding signs that read “President Hate, Leave Our State!” and “Trump, Renounce White Nationalis­m Now.”
Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images People protest the arrival of President Trump as he visits the Tree of Life Congregati­on Tuesday in Pittsburgh, in the wake of a mass shooting at a synagogue that left 11 people dead. Protestors gathered near the Tree of Life synagogue, where the shooting took place, holding signs that read “President Hate, Leave Our State!” and “Trump, Renounce White Nationalis­m Now.”

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