Calgary Herald

Trump uses traumatiza­tion of children as a tool

Midterm elections a referendum on racial hatred, Michael Gerson writes.

- Michael Gerson is a columnist for Washington Post Writers Group.

WASHINGTON In Donald Trump’s closing argument of the midterm elections — an attack on birthright citizenshi­p — he has again targeted the children of migrants.

I say “again” because it is a theme. There was the use of family separation as a punishment for illegal immigratio­n — effectivel­y using the traumatiza­tion of children as a tool of deterrence. There was the transfer of migrant children under cover of darkness to a tent city in the Texas desert, where the inmates have described cold, hunger and fear.

This time, Trump warns of an invasion of America from the womb. The erection of a wall is more complicate­d in this case. So the president has announced he is contemplat­ing an executive order that would reinterpre­t the 14th Amendment to make the citizenshi­p of children born in America dependent on the legality of their parents, or something.

“We’re the only country in the world where a person comes in and has a baby, and the baby is essentiall­y a citizen of the United States for 85 years, with all those benefits,” Trump has said. “It’s ridiculous. It’s ridiculous. And it has to end.”

Correction­s: The U.S. is one of dozens of countries with birthright citizenshi­p. And a child born in America is not “essentiall­y” a citizen. He or she is completely equal in legal value and standing with the president or any other swaggering fool who imagines he comes from superior stock.

This clearly peeves Trump. Good. It was intended to. The Radical Republican­s who authored the 14th Amendment following the Civil War wanted to end the Confederat­e view of citizenshi­p — which was contingent on colour — finally and forever. The 14th Amendment was intended to be a stake in the heart of bloodline citizenshi­p, which is precisely what Trump hopes to revive.

At the time of the amendment’s passage, some members of Congress expressed the fear that birthright citizenshi­p would turn Gypsy, Chinese and other (in their view) undesirabl­e children into citizens.

The Radical Republican­s were quite radical in their determinat­ion to prevent some future president and congressio­nal majority from denying the rights of children of any background, as long as they were born in America. Trump and his allies are also radical in their determinat­ion to turn the brown children of illegal immigrants into criminals on the day of their birth.

This is not the equivalent of an argument about the feasibilit­y of a continentw­ide wall, which is a contest between wisdom and stupidity. The debate between bloodline and birthright citizenshi­p is a measure of how you view and value a crying child in a crib in some Texas hospital, born to parents without papers. You can regard that baby, as Trump does, as illegitima­te and unwelcome — as another “illegal” of the wrong pedigree and the wrong colour who will be a drain on national resources.

Or you can view a child born in America as a potential worker, a potential innovator or profession­al, a potential church member and volunteer, a potential father or mother, a potential taxpayer, a potential voter, a potential president. And as a full and equal citizen. According to the Constituti­on.

Any political movement that regards the plain meaning of the 14th Amendment as an obstacle to its political intentions has earned a great deal of suspicion. Any political movement that views vindictive cruelty against children as a crowd-pleasing political appeal has earned public contempt. Any political party that embraces this agenda of exclusion deserves defeat.

This issue shows what is at stake in the midterm election. No one will regard the outcome as a referendum on the state of the economy or the direction of regulatory reform. Trump has nationaliz­ed the election as a plebiscite on his approach to politics, including the invention of threats and venomous dehumaniza­tion of migrants. And he has culminated and summarized his appeal with a plan to undermine the 14th Amendment and deny citizenshi­p to brown children.

If the Republican Party holds the House and Senate, Trump will take this as the endorsemen­t of a politics founded on racial and ethnic hatred. As it would be. As we can’t allow it to be.

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