The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Senators silent on Trump’s racism

- Dana Milbank Columnist

The silence is deafening. President Donald Trump has gone from racist dog whistles to an all-out Confederat­e bugle call with a rebel yell — yet his Republican enablers in Congress cover their ears.

He retweets a video in which a man shouts “white power” and later deletes but never disavows it. He talks of the pandemic as “kung flu,” calls for violence against “thugs” in the streets of Minneapoli­s and labels a sign proclaimin­g “Black Lives Matter” a “symbol of hate.” He threatens to veto a defense bill if it removes the names of Confederat­e generals from U.S. military bases.

In the past few days, he has declared that those marching under “the banner of social justice” are part of a “radical ideology attacking our country” and are “bad, evil people” seeking “to end America” in favor of “far-left fascism.” And he has attacked NASCAR for banning the Confederat­e flag and said its only black full-time driver should “apologize” for a “hoax” after a noose found in his garage was determined not to have been directed at him.

Yet from Republican officehold­ers, nothing.

“President Trump’s unyielding push to preserve Confederat­e symbols and the legacy of white domination,”

Robert Costa and Philip Rucker wrote on July 4, “has unnerved Republican­s who have long enabled him but now fear losing power and forever associatin­g their party with his racial animus.”

Unnerved, but inaudible. “On Capitol Hill, some Republican­s fret — mostly privately, to avoid his wrath — that Trump’s fixation on racial and other cultural issues leaves their party running against the currents of change,” Costa and Rucker wrote.

So Trump’s enablers are unnerved not because his racism is despicable but because they fear losing power. And the enablers fret, but in private.

The silence, often attributed to cowardice, is really complicity. Racial resentment has become the primary driver and predictor of support for the Republican Party, a trend that has accelerate­d under Trump. If Republican lawmakers continue to “fret privately” as Trump bases his reelection on clumsy racist demagoguer­y, they must be held to account for condoning the redefiniti­on of the GOP as the new home of the white power movement.

So let’s hold them to account. This week I emailed the campaigns of the 11 Republican senators who face potentiall­y competitiv­e reelection­s this year.

Noting that Republican members of Congress have been privately fretting about Trump’s racism, I invited each of the senators to comment on statements Trump has made in recent weeks:

• Decrying schools, newsrooms and corporate boardrooms for a “new far-left fascism .… designed to overthrow the American Revolution.”

• Saying: “The unhinged leftwing mob is trying to vandalize our history, desecrate our monuments, our beautiful monuments, tear down our statues, and punish, cancel and persecute anyone who does not conform. … They want to demolish our heritage.”

• Proclaimin­g: “The radical ideology attacking our country advances under the banner of social justice. But in truth, it would demolish both justice and society. We will not be tyrannized, we will not be demeaned, and we will not be intimidate­d by bad, evil people.”

• Warning about the menace of “a very tough hombre” breaking into homes and the police not responding.

• And his remarks on “kung flu,” NASCAR, military bases named for Confederat­es and the “white power” video.

Sen. Kelly Loeffler’s campaign said that she and Trump stand “strongly against racism” and that “this is just another one of the media’s silly games.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham’s campaign directed me to a Fox News radio interview in which Graham disagreed with Trump’s NASCAR tweet but said Trump isn’t racist.

Sen. Mitch McConnell’s campaign said he “abhors racism” but that his responsibi­lities “don’t include acting as a deputy press secretary for the White House.”

Sen. Susan Collins’s campaign said she has challenged Trump on many occasions, including his response to unrest in Charlottes­ville, Va.

The others responded as Republican­s generally do when asked about Trump’s racism: with crickets.

They think their silence protects them. But it does something else: It turns them into the handmaiden­s of white supremacy.

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