Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump considers pardon for Arpaio

- By Astrid Galvan

PHOENIX — President Donald Trump says he may grant a pardon to former Sheriff Joe Arpaio following his recent conviction in federal court, prompting outrage among critics who say the move would amount to an endorsemen­t of racism.

Trump told Fox News during an interview Sunday that he was seriously considerin­g issuing a pardon within the next few days. That was welcome news for the former Phoenix-area sheriff, who lost a reelection bid in November and who was convicted of misdemeano­r contempt of court on July 31.

But it angered immigrant rights activists and others who say it amounts to support for racism on the same day that Trump disavowed white nationalis­ts whose rally in Charlottes­ville, Va., turned violent this weekend, leaving one woman dead.

A federal judge ruled in 2013 that Arpaio’s officers racially profiled Latinos. But the sheriff refused to stop his immigratio­n patrols, eventually leading to the criminal contempt of court case that he’s embroiled in. It also contribute­d to his failed reelection bid last year.

Arpaio said Monday that he learned of the president’s comments in the morning and was glad he stood by him.

Trump on Sunday told Fox that Arpaio is “a great American patriot” and said he hates to see what has happened to him, according to the news report.

The two have been allies for the past couple of years. Arpaio campaigned for Trump at rallies in Iowa, Nevada and Arizona, and he gave a speech at the Republican National Convention.

On Monday, the president condemned hate groups and said racism is evil in a statement that was much more forceful than he’d made earlier after the weekend clashes in Virginia that left one woman dead after a car plowed into a group of counterpro­testers who opposed a rally by white nationalis­ts. The white nationalis­ts were protesting a plan to remove a statute of Confederat­e Gen Robert E. Lee.

Cecillia Wang, deputy legal director for the ACLU, criticized the idea that Trump could pardon Arpaio, saying the former sheriff had violated court orders that prohibited illegal detention of Latinos.

“Make no mistake: This would be an official presidenti­al endorsemen­t of racism,” Wang said.

Thomas A. Saenz, president and general counsel of MALDEF, or the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, said in statement that Trump’s comments to Fox were hypocritic­al and demonstrat­e “how inextricab­ly conflicted he is about condemning racism and the targeting of racial minorities”

“That the White House chose to praise such unconstitu­tional, discrimina­tory behavior in defiance of a federal judge on the same day that it refused to condemn the actions of white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville compounds the damage of Trump’s appalling moral relativism,” Saenz said. “In politics, there is hypocrisy on many sides, but the White House’s praise of Arpaio as it tries to extricate itself from equivocal statements about the clear domestic hate-based terrorism in Charlottes­ville will forever stand out as record-breaking, political disingenuo­usness.”

 ??  ?? Joe Arpaio
Joe Arpaio

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States