The Columbus Dispatch

Why President Trump isn’t fighting the bots

- E.J. Dionne writes for the Washington Post Writers Group. ejdionne@washpost. com.

interventi­on in the 2016 election. His outcries reached a kind of crescendo on Wednesday morning with a tweet in which Trump called on Attorney General Jeff Sessions (who has recused himself from the inquiry) to “stop this Rigged Witch Hunt right now.”

It’s often said that Trump’s ego cannot tolerate the idea he was helped into the White House by Russia’s exertions and that he sees ongoing reports about the probe as marring what in his view is a truly great record. Yet it’s hard to interpret Trump’s hostility to Mueller as anything but an expression of concern that the special counsel will unearth highly damaging informatio­n about him and his campaign.

It’s an establishe­d fact that the Kremlin and Trump were on the same side in the 2016 election. And so far, the online activity in connection with the 2018 elections — some of which has been linked to the Kremlin’s Internet Research Agency — rather consistent­ly plays into right-wing propaganda and targets Democrats such as Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill.

The online meddling has a broader objective as well: to divide our country even more sharply than it already is and to weaponize racial and ethnic divisions.

Thus, some of the phony sites Facebook uncovered that were putatively “leftwing” highlighte­d themes related to immigratio­n (amplifying the “abolish ICE” message) and race (calls for counter-protests to a white supremacis­t demonstrat­ion scheduled for Aug. 11 and 12 in Washington). Put simply: the more we hate each other, the better it is for our enemies.

In the face of active measures by our adversarie­s to widen our nation’s social gulfs, one might imagine a more responsibl­e leader trying to bring us together to ease our anxieties about each other and to stand against endless cycles of recriminat­ion.

Instead, Trump is working in tandem with these outside trolls to aggravate resentment, stoke backlash and incite his opponents.

On the very day that Facebook revealed the new influence operation and announced it had deleted 32 pages and accounts connected to it, Trump went to Florida for a rally where he rehearsed some of his favorite incendiary themes.

He said that Democrats want to “open our borders; they want to let crime, tremendous crime, into our country.” For good measure, he also accused them of “trying to give illegal immigrants the right to vote.”

And in a comment bewilderin­g to all who visit supermarke­ts on a regular basis, he defended voterID laws — which work to reduce minority turnout — by observing that “if you go out and you want to buy groceries, you need a picture on a card, you need ID.”

The absurdity of some of Trump’s statements should not distract us from their divisive ends. The same is true of his habitual return to reviling kneeling NFL players, most of them African-Americans protesting injustice, and his repeated declaratio­ns that we can all now say “Merry Christmas” again, a play on white evangelica­l fears of being marginaliz­ed in a changing country. He touched on both issues in his Florida speech.

Understand­ing that Trump’s strategy of maintainin­g power rests on stoking the animositie­s that allowed him to reach the White House in the first place explains why he has no apparent desire to contain cybercampa­igns organized overseas that advance the same objectives. He seems ready to tell them to keep on keepin’ on.

Doing so also underscore­s that battling the bots and the hackers is not primarily a technical question but a matter of political will and moral commitment. It requires resolute resistance to the forces turning us against each other.

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