The Record (Troy, NY)

Trump’s empathy for white racial grievance not new

- Columnist

No one should have been surprised to see President Trump playing footsie with racists. He’s been doing it for years.

On Saturday, when Trump could not bring himself to condemn white supremacis­ts for the Charlottes­ville tragedy, he was just being consistent: He often has shown empathy for white racial grievance.

After all, who was the most prominent voice of birtherism, the unfounded and blatantly racist challenge to President Obama’s legitimacy? Who exclaimed on Twitter in 2014 that “you won’t see another black president for generation­s” because of Obama’s performanc­e? Who has disseminat­ed false, racially charged “statistics” about black crime?

Trump made a rare climbdown on Monday, specifical­ly condemning violence by white supremacis­ts, neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan. But his initial reaction on Saturday — after a car, allegedly driven by a young Nazi sympathize­r, plowed into a crowd of demonstrat­ors, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring many others — was to denounce “hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides.”

In fact, there were just two sides in Charlottes­ville: militant white nationalis­ts, including former Klan leader David Duke and neo-Nazis, who had descended in large numbers; and counter-protesters who came out to tell the assembled racist horde to get lost. Trump’s first statement seemed to make no moral distinctio­n.

Prominent Republican­s quickly took the president to task for his disgracefu­l equivocati­on. “Very important for the nation to hear @potus describe events in #Charlottes­ville for what they are, a terror attack by #whitesupre­macists,” Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said on Twitter. “I urge the Department of Justice to immediatel­y investigat­e and prosecute this grotesque act of domestic terrorism,” tweeted Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. “We should call evil by its name. My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas to go unchalleng­ed here at home,” wrote Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.

Those are stirring words, gentlemen, but where have you been hiding all this righteousn­ess? Were you not paying attention when then-candidate Trump attacked a federal judge for his Mexican-American heritage and demeaned a Gold Star mother and father for their Muslim faith? Did you not hear the screech of white grievance at his campaign rallies, often not so much a dog whistle as a blaring siren?

I might take all the GOP breast-beating more seriously if the party would abandon its state-by-state campaign to impose restrictiv­e election laws that disproport­ionately disenfranc­hise African-American and Hispanic voters. In contrast to the Republican reaction, the neoNazi Daily Stormer website was

quite pleased with Trump’s initial comment. “He didn’t attack us. He just said the nation should come together,” wrote the racist, anti-Semitic site’s founder. “No condemnati­on at all. When asked to condemn, he just walked out of the room. Really, really good. God bless him.” One prominent African-American who gave the Trump administra­tion a chance — Kenneth Frazier, chief executive of the giant Merck pharmaceut­ical company — decided Monday morning that he’d had enough, resigning in protest from Trump’s advisory American Manufactur­ing Council. Trump shot back on Twitter that now Frazier “will have more time to LOWER RIPOFF DRUG PRICES!” Note that a personal slight provoked a sharp, speedy, all-caps response. Yet even in the Monday statement, Trump did not call Saturday’s horror an act of domestic terrorism. Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that the Charlottes­ville incident was, indeed, an act of terrorism, and that the Justice Department has opened a hate crime investigat­ion to ascertain whether others may have been involved. Reflect for a moment on how Trump’s “many sides” comment made Sessions, of

all people, look like some kind of civil rights hero. There are those who see Trump’s initial reluctance to denounce white-power groups as nothing but politics — an appeal to white voters who are anxious about growing diversity. Yet the president’s Monday reversal was clearly a political calculatio­n. I believe what we heard Saturday was simply a genuine first reaction. In 1973, Trump and his father were sued by the Justice Department for refusing to rent apartments to African-Americans. He said in a 1989 interview that “a well-educated black” has an advantage in the job market — a victimhood claim refuted by academic studies and his own record of not having minorities in key posts at the Trump Organizati­on. He maintained as recently as last October that the “Central Park Five” — four African-American men and one Latino— were guilty of a brutal 1989 rape, despite definitive DNA evidence that exonerated them years ago.

Trump has called himself the “least racist person on earth.” There is no end to the man’s lies.

Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobi­nson@washpost. com.

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Eugene Robinson

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