The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Trump aide: Critics should focus on own issues

- By ZEKE MILLER and HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON >> A top White House aide said Sunday that President Donald Trump, frustrated by the Democrats’ unrelentin­g investigat­ions and talk of impeachmen­t, swung hard at an influentia­l black Democratic congressma­n and his Baltimore district because he believes such Capitol Hill critics are neglecting serious problems back home in their zeal to undermine his presidency.

Acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney insisted in two national television interviews that that Trump was not making racist comments when he tweeted that the majority-black district of Rep. Elijah Cummings was a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess.” Mulvaney, a former congressma­n himself, said he understood why some people could perceive Trump’s words as racist.

Trump’s repeated weekend attacks on Cummings, the powerful chairman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, marked the latest rhetorical shot against a prominent lawmaker. Two weeks ago, Trump caused a nationwide uproar with racist tweets directed at four Democratic congresswo­men of color as he looked to stoke racial divisions for political gain heading into the 2020 election.

Mulvaney said Trump’s words were exaggerate­d for effect — “Does the president speak hyperbolic­ally? Absolutely” — and meant to draw attention to Democratic-backed investigat­ions of the Republican president and his team in Washington.

“Instead of helping people back home, they’re focusing on scandal in Washington D.C., which is the exact opposite of what they said they would do when they ran for election in 2018,” Mulvaney said, pointing at Democrats who now control the House.

He asserted that Trump’s barbs were a reaction to what the president considered to be inaccurate statements by Cummings about conditions in which children are being held in detention at the U.S.-Mexico border.

At a hearing last week, Cummings accused a top administra­tion official of wrongly calling reports of filthy, overcrowde­d border facilities “unsubstant­iated.”

“When the president hears lies like that, he’s going to fight back,” Mulvaney said.

Trump’s tweets Saturday charged that Cummings’ district, which includes Johns Hopkins Hospital, the Social Security Administra­tion and the national headquarte­rs of the NAACP, is “considered the worst run and most dangerous anywhere in the United States.”

Condemnati­on followed from Democrats over the weekend, including some of the party’s presidenti­al candidates. Statements from a spokesman for Maryland’s Republican governor and from the lieutenant governor defended Cummings’ district

and its people.

Trump, unbowed, resumed the verbal volleying Sunday: “There is nothing wrong with bringing out the very obvious fact that Congressma­n Elijah Cummings has done a very poor job for his district and the City of Baltimore.”

The president has tried to put racial polarizati­on at the center of his appeal to his base of voters, tapping into anxieties about demographi­c and cultural changes in the nation in the belief that the divided country he leads will simply choose sides over issues such as race.

Mulvaney argued that Trump would criticize any lawmaker, no matter the person’s race, in a similar way if Trump felt that individual spoke unfairly about the president’s policies. He volunteere­d that if Rep. Adam Schiff, the California Democrat who leads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, had made the same remarks as Cummings, Trump would have pushed back.

“It has zero to do with the fact that Adam is Jewish and everything to do with Adam would just be wrong if he were saying that,” Mulvaney said. “This is what the president does. He fights and he’s not wrong to do so.”

To Mulvaney, Trump was “right to raise” the challenges faced in Cummings’ district at the same time that Cummings and other Democrats are “chasing down” the Russia investigat­ion undertaken by Robert Mueller and pursuing “this bizarre impeachmen­t crusade.”

Nonetheles­s, the chief of staff said he understood why some people view Trump’s comments as racist, “but that doesn’t mean that it is racist.”

“The president is pushing back against what he sees is wrong,” he added. “It’s how he’s done it in the past and he’ll continue to do it in the future.”

Cummings is leading multiple investigat­ions of the president’s government­al dealings. In his direct response to Trump on Twitter, Cummings said: “Mr. President, I go home to my district daily. Each morning, I wake up, and I go and fight for my neighbors. It is my constituti­onal duty to conduct oversight of the Executive Branch. But, it is my moral duty to fight for my constituen­ts.”

Cummings has also drawn the president’s ire for investigat­ions touching on his family members serving in the White House. His committee voted along party lines Thursday to authorize subpoenas for personal emails and texts used for official business by top White House aides, including Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Julián Castro said Trump was engaging in “racial priming.”

“Using this language and taking actions to try and get people to move into their camps by racial and ethnic identity. That’s how he thinks he won in 2016 and that’s how he thinks he’s going to win in 2020,” Castro said.

Rarlier this month, Trump drew bipartisan condemnati­on following his call for Democratic Reps. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez of New York, Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan to get out of the U.S. “right now.” He said that if the lawmakers “hate our country,” they can go back to their “broken and crimeinfes­ted” countries.

All four lawmakers of color are American citizens and three of the four were born in the U.S. The House later voted largely along party lines to condemn his “racist comments.”

Mulvaney claimed that if he had focused on investigat­ions when he was in Congress rather than poverty and other issues, “I’d get fired.”

More rural than Cummings’ district, Mulvaney’s former district in South Carolina has a lower percapita income than the one targeted by Trump, and the poverty rates are roughly the same.

Cummings’ district is about 55% black and includes a large portion of Baltimore. The city has struggled with violent crime, with more than 300 homicides for four years in a row. It has crumbling infrastruc­ture and a police department under federal oversight.

Mulvaney was interviewe­d on “Fox News Sunday” and CBS’ “Face the Nation,” where Castro also appeared.

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