The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Trump has done the impossible: He has united the Democrats

- Dana Milbank Columnist

President Trump, bless him, has once again achieved the impossible: He has unified the Democrats.

The fractious opposition party had been holding one of its regular Festivals of Gratuitous SelfInjury over the past few weeks on the matter of race. Sen. Kamala Harris (Calif.) and other Democratic presidenti­al candidates had attacked the “hurtful” actions of front-runner Joe Biden from decades ago in opposing busing and in working with segregatio­nist senators. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.) split Democrats by accusing Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) of the “explicit singling out of newly elected women of color.”

Now, Trump has come to the Democrats’ rescue by reminding them, and all the world, what racism really looks like. On Sunday, he attacked four nonwhite Democratic congresswo­men — OcasioCort­ez, Ayanna Pressley (Mass.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.) — by saying they “originally came from countries whose government­s are a complete and total catastroph­e” and proposing that they “go back” to the “broken and crime infested places from which they came.”

Thus, Trump would have these lawmakers “go back” to Ohio (in Pressley’s case), New York (Ocasio-Cortez’s birthplace) and Michigan (Tlaib’s). Omar, who emigrated from Somalia as a child, grew up in Minnesota. Rather than back down from this notion that nonwhites are not American, Trump broadened his attack on the four on Monday, saying they “hate our country” and proposing they “apologize to our country” and to him.

And Democrats were bickering over Biden’s relationsh­ip with James Eastland in 1973?

Democrats’ difference­s are trivial, or should be, as they spend the next 16 months preparing for an election that will either affirm America as a multicultu­ral society or define it as a redoubt of white nationalis­m. Trump’s racist words, clearly aimed at firing up his most ardent supporters, will, as in 2018, bring out his opponents in even greater numbers — as long as Democrats can move beyond their own squabbles.

There remains some squeamishn­ess about calling Trump what he is. The New York Times said Trump has fanned “the flames of a racial fire.” CNN called his words “racially charged.” The Washington Post said he “used a trope broadly viewed as racist.”

It’s long past time to stop pretending. Studies before and after the 2016 election showed that racial animus was the primary motivation of Trump voters, even more than economic concern. Certainly, many Trump voters were motivated by the hope of tax cuts and of Supreme Court picks. But with each of Trump’s successive racist outbursts, it should become more difficult for at least some of these Republican­s to stomach the white nationalis­m Trump promotes.

This is surely why Republican officehold­ers have been almost universall­y silent about Trump’s latest ugliness, and GOP leaders have been shamefully mute. Of the few to speak, Rep. Will Hurd (Tex.), the lone black Republican in the House, denounced Trump’s “racist and xenophobic” words. Rep. Justin Amash (Mich.), an independen­t who recently quit the GOP, likely gave voice to his cowardly colleagues’ unspoken sentiments when he called Trump’s words “racist and disgusting.”

Trump’s naked bigotry inspired House Democrats on Monday to set aside the skirmish between Pelosi’s leadership team and Ocasio-Cortez’s “Squad.” Instead, they prepared a House resolution denouncing Trump’s words.

That’s a start. But for the next 16 months, Democrats must remember that their own difference­s are relatively insignific­ant. The latest racism is a new low for Trump, but worse will undoubtedl­y come. For Trump, there will be no bottom — unless and until voters tell him to go back to the place from which he came.

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