Texarkana Gazette

Democrats and the whole ‘lynching’ hypocrisy

- Larry Elder

President Donald Trump ignited yet another controvers­y when, on Twitter, he compared the Democrats’ pursuit of his impeachmen­t to a “lynching.”

His tweet that launched a thousand denunciati­ons read: “So some day, if a Democrat becomes President and the Republican­s win the House, even by a tiny margin, they can impeach the President, without due process or fairness or any legal rights. All Republican­s must remember what they are witnessing here — a lynching. But we will WIN!”

Immediatel­y, Trump derangemen­t syndrome kicked in. The critics cried: How dare Trump — a white man — trivialize America’s history of blacks lynched by white racists?

NPR’s Tamara Keith promptly fired off this tweet: “This is new rhetoric from President Trump. From ‘witch hunt’ to ‘coup’ to ‘lynching,’ Trump keeps escalating his language. (Clarence Thomas called his confirmati­on process a “high tech lynching” but there is a big difference between Trump and Thomas).”

Presumably, Thomas, a black man, could acceptably refer to his confirmati­on hearing, in which he was accused of sexual harassment, as a “lynching,” but, Trump, a white man, cannot.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden tweeted: “Impeachmen­t is not ‘lynching,’ it is part of our Constituti­on. Our country has a dark, shameful history with lynching, and to even think about making this comparison is abhorrent. It’s despicable.”

Speaking at a historical­ly black college, according to Axios, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Kamala Harris said: “What do we have in Donald Trump? Someone who dares — dares — to use the word ‘lynching’ with the blood that has been poured on the soil of South Carolina and so many (places). And dares to talk about his victimizat­ion and compare it to those who have suffered in a criminal justice system in America that has too often been informed by racial bias and by injustice. And he dares to compare himself to the people who have been at the wrong end of a system that is in need of reform.” Harris tweeted: “Lynching is a reprehensi­ble stain on this nation’s history, as is this President. We’ll never erase the pain and trauma of lynching, and to invoke that torture to whitewash your own corruption is disgracefu­l.”

Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., a black congressma­n, tweeted: “You think this impeachmen­t is a LYNCHING? What the hell is wrong with you? Do you know how many people look like me have been lynched, since the inception of this country, by people who look like you.”

The left-wing website Slate published an article with the headline “Trump’s ‘Lynching’ Tweet Isn’t Just Offensive. It’s Dangerous.” Slate wrote: “The word lynching conjures the imagery of the 4,000 killed in racial terror lynchings by the 1960s, what Billie Holiday sang as “Black bodies swinging in the Southern breeze.” By definition, to be lynched is to be punished or killed (often by a group) without due process or a trial. The president’s claim is facially absurd because he is not being punished without process.”

Here’s the problem: Where were the voices of indignatio­n during the impeachmen­t of President Bill Clinton when his defenders used the very same word? Let’s go to the 1998 videotape:

White male Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., described those pursuing Clinton’s impeachmen­t as a “political lynch mob.” McDermott said, “Find the rope, find the tree and ask a bunch of questions later.”

White male Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., said to Clinton, “The lynch mob, though, Mr. President, now has a new leader.”

White male Sen. John

Kerry, D-Mass., said, “It’s a verbal political lynching on the floor of the Senate.”

Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., on the House floor, said: “What we are doing here is not a prosecutio­n, it’s a persecutio­n and indeed it is a political lynching.”

Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill., on the House floor, said: “I will not vote for this nightmare before Christmas. I will not vote for this lynching in the people’s House. I will vote against these resolution­s.”

Biden, another white male, in 1998 told CNN that history will judge Clinton’s impeachmen­t as a “partisan lynching.” When asked about the apparent hypocrisy of slamming Trump for using the same lynching rhetoric he once used, Biden apologized for using the word “lynching” in the case of Clinton. But Biden argued that when Trump used the word, he did so as a “dog whistle,” meaning Trump did it to fuel his supposedly racist base.

Biden said: “I apologize for it then, and I apologize for it now. The fact of the matter is it shouldn’t be used at all, but the encouragem­ent of white supremacis­ts, which (Donald Trump has) done his entire presidency, that’s what I was responding to. Because that’s what it was. It was like a dog whistle … he’s done it throughout — from Charlottes­ville on.” Note that Biden, once again, mischaract­erized what Trump said about Charlottes­ville.

So, when President Trump gets re-elected, get ready for four more years of Democrats’ double standards and selective outrage.

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