The Phnom Penh Post

US House votes to condemn Trump’s ‘xenophobic remarks’

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THE US House of Representa­tives formally condemned President Donald Trump on Tuesday for xenophobic attacks on four minority Democratic lawmakers and hostile language targeting immigrants, as the president denied accusation­s of racism.

Top Republican leaders rallied around Trump, but four members of the president’s party voted with the 235 Democrats to condemn him for “racist comments that have legitimise­d and increased fear and hatred of new Americans and people of colour”.

One independen­t lawmaker also supported the measure, which takes aim at Trump’s weekend tweets telling a group of progressiv­e Democratic congresswo­men of colour to “go back” to other countries.

The resolution also takes the president to task for “referring to immigrants and asylum seekers as ‘invaders’”.

Trump has a long history of pandering to white suspicions about other ethnic groups, and the resolution criticises him for “saying that Members of Congress who are immigrants [or those of our colleagues who are wrongly assumed to be immigrants] do not belong in Congress or in the US”.

Democrats hold a majority in the 435member House but are outnumbere­d by Republican­s in the Senate, where the resolution is unlikely to be considered.

The four congresswo­men – all but one of whom were born in the US – are of Hispanic, Arab, Somali and AfricanAme­rican descent.

Trump has stuck by the provocativ­e comments.

“Our Country is Free, Beautiful and Very Successful. If you hate our Country, or if you are not happy here, you can leave!” the president tweeted on Tuesday.

Democratic leaders denounced Trump’s remarks, and rallied around the lawmakers – Alexandria OcasioCort­ez, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley.

Omar is the only one born outside the US.

Slamming the “so-called vote” as a “Democrat con game”, Trump urged Republican­s not to “show ‘weakness’ and fall into their trap”.

“Those Tweets were NOT Racist. I don’t have a Racist bone in my body!” Trump said.

“This should be a vote on the filthy language, statements and lies told by the Democrat Congresswo­men, who I truly believe, based on their actions, hate our Country,” he wrote.

“Nancy Pelosi tried to push them away, but now they are forever wedded to the Democrat Party,” Trump added, in a jab at the House speaker who has had a tenuous relationsh­ip with the four left-leaning first-term congresswo­men.

Speaking on the House floor prior to t he vote, Pelosi said: “Ever y single member of this institutio­n, Democratic and Republican, should join us in condemning t he president’s racist t weets.”

“To do anything less would be a shocking rejection of our values and a shameful abdication of our oath of office to protect the American people.”

“I know racism when I see it. I know racism when I feel it. And at the highest level of government, there’s no room for racism,” Representa­tive John Lewis, an American civil rights icon, said in remarks on the House floor.

‘All about politics’

Trump’s repeated attacks appear to be aimed at galvanisin­g his mostly white electoral base ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al vote.

They would seem to have borne fruit, with his approval rating among Republican­s rising five percentage points to 72 per cent, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted on Monday and Tuesday.

His overall rating with the public at large remained unchanged from last week at 41 per cent.

“See you in 2020!” said Trump, who before becoming president pushed the racist “birther” conspiracy theory that Barack Obama was not born in the US.

Ocasio-Cortez dismissed Trump’s denial that he is a racist.

“You’re right, Mr. President – you don’t have a racist bone in your body,” she tweeted. “You have a racist mind in your head, and a racist heart in your chest.”

She also took aim at Republican lawmakers who voted against the resolution, telling CBS News that “they could not bring themselves to have the basic human decency to vote against the statement that the president made”.

Trump meanwhile took to Twitter on Tuesday night to hail “how unified the Republican Party was on today’s vote”.

While some Republican members of Congress have condemned Trump’s remarks, House Republican leaders closed ranks behind the president.

“This is all about politics,” said House Republican minority leader Representa­tive Kevin McCarthy of California.

Senator Mitch McConnell, the leader of the Republican majority in the Senate, said “the president is not a racist”.

 ??  ?? US speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi (centre) walks with reporters before the Democrat-controlled House of Representa­tives passed a resolution condemning President Donald Trump for his ‘racist comments’ about four Democratic congresswo­men the day before, in Washington, DC on Tuesday.
US speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi (centre) walks with reporters before the Democrat-controlled House of Representa­tives passed a resolution condemning President Donald Trump for his ‘racist comments’ about four Democratic congresswo­men the day before, in Washington, DC on Tuesday.

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