The Denver Post

Trump’s “go back” tweets leave no room for doubt

- By Timothy L. O'Brien Timothy L. O’Brien is the executive editor of Bloomberg Opinion.

As he has so many times since bursting onto the presidenti­al stage in 2015, Donald Trump played the race card on Sunday. He launched nearly three dozen broadsides on Twitter, but a trio of his tweets stood out because they demonstrat­ed how casually he likes to uncork his venom and how unwilling the Republican Party is to contain him.

Trump was targeting four new Democratic congresswo­men of color (nicknamed “The Squad”) who have become advocates for progressiv­e policies and occasional thorns in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s side: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and

Rashida Tlaib of Michigan.

Omar is from Somalia. The other three women were born in the U.S. Pressley is black and was born in Ohio. Ocasio-Cortez was born in New York and is of Puerto Rican descent. Tlaib was born in Michigan and her parents were Palestinia­n immigrants.

So Trump’s tweets could have been translated as: “If you’re a black woman born in the U.S. and a member of Congress, I think you belong in Africa.”

Or, perhaps: “If you’re a woman of Hispanic descent born in the U.S. and a member of Congress, I think you belong in Puerto Rico — and I still seem to think that’s another country.”

If there was ever any doubt that the president is a racist and a bigot and is willing to pander to racists and bigots to continue holding office, the tweets he aimed at The Squad on Sunday should put all of that to rest.

But, of course, it’s unlikely to put anything to rest.

After all, the hosts at “Fox & Friends” contribute­d on Sunday by just having a few laughs about the president’s tweets. Meanwhile, Matt Wolking, the self-described “Deputy Director of Communicat­ions — Rapid Response” for the president’s 2020 campaign, did his part by responding so rapidly to the widespread criticism that he simply pretended the media misreprese­nted what Trump tweeted. Rep. Chip Roy of Texas crossed lines to offer what was ultimately a tepid critique of Trump’s Twitter storm. Other than Roy, crickets.

Some principled conservati­ves were willing to step up. George Conway, the husband of a prominent Trump adviser, Kellyanne Conway, tweeted that Trump’s comments were “bigotry, pure and simple.” And, he added, addressing Trump directly: “You are a disgrace to the office you hold, and you are a disgrace to the nation.”

The president also is shamelessl­y hypocritic­al. His rants about the migrant threat at the U.S.’ southern border and his call for the Squad to self-deport glides past the fact that his mother was a Scottish immigrant and his father was the son of a German immigrant. Trump’s first and third wives were immigrants from Eastern Europe, and his wife Melania’s parents became U.S. citizens last year by taking advantage of a chain migration program that the president and his principal immigratio­n adviser, Stephen Miller, have publicly derided.

All of this follows a week in which Trump promised to launch a federal sweep nationwide to round up undocument­ed immigrants so he could deport them.

This past week — and Trump’s tweets on Sunday — are reminders that the president has chosen to divide and exploit rather than lead. A useful lesson to draw from that is that Trump and his most dedicated supporters have ripped the band-aid off whatever reassuring notions the U.S. might have had about the progress of civil rights and the withering of racism in the country. And it ultimately will be up to voters to decide what to do about the racism and vitriol that Trump has put in front of them.

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