Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ANGRY BACKLASH

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK

follows Trump exchange with black journalist at news conference.

Many blacks are expressing anger over an exchange between President Donald Trump and a veteran black journalist, with many considerin­g it to be the latest indication of Trump’s inability to relate to them.

Already skeptical of Trump, many blacks said they were exasperate­d by the fact that, during his news conference on Thursday, the new president asked April Ryan, longtime White House correspond­ent for American Urban Radio Networks, to help broker a meeting for him with black lawmakers.

“Will you meet with the Congressio­nal Black Caucus?” Ryan asked. Trump responded: “I would. You want to set up the meeting? Are they friends of yours?”

The exchange set off a firestorm on social media as many black people balked at Trump’s suggestion of an assumed relationsh­ip between Ryan and caucus members because they are of the same race.

Susan Rice, U.N. ambassador under President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, tweeted an article about the exchange and called Trump’s remarks “notably offensive.”

“I’m also really pleased he didn’t ask her to sweep and mop in the room where the press conference was being held,” Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., a former Congressio­nal Black Caucus chairman, quipped during an MSNBC interview on Friday.

Adding to the ire: It was the second time in less than 30 days — during Black History Month — that Trump said something that came across as indifferen­t toward black people. The president was ridiculed Feb. 1 for praising abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass, who died in 1895, as someone “who’s done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more.”

After Thursday’s news conference, the caucus tweeted a copy of a letter, dated Jan. 19 and addressed to Trump, requesting a meeting. The caucus said that, although it got no response to that letter, Trump did reach out Thursday and that plans for a meeting are now in the works.

The White House declined to comment Friday about Trump’s exchange with Ryan.

Trump used the moment to pander to his supporters, said Lehigh University professor James Peterson, and the irony is that the point of Ryan’s question — Trump’s plan for urban communitie­s — got lost.

“His histrionic­s … obscured what was a very significan­t question in the first place,” Peterson said.

Trump’s comments came while the White House was in the midst of making overtures to black constituen­cies. The same day that Trump sparred with reporters, Vice President Mike Pence joined with Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., one of three blacks in the Senate, for a White House “listening session” with black small-business owners and community leaders. The president is also expected to issue an executive order soon on support for historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es.

Although Trump has said his policies will benefit blacks and predicted during his campaign that he would win the black vote, his support from black voters in November was about 8 percent.

Just before his Jan. 20 inaugurati­on, Trump tangled on Twitter with civil-rights icon and Democratic Rep. John Lewis of Georgia. Civil-rights groups, and several blacks in Congress, were particular­ly opposed to Trump’s nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions, whom they view as holding racist views, as attorney general. Sessions was confirmed.

Within days of taking office, Trump threatened on Twitter to “send in the feds” to deal with gun violence in Chicago — a nod to his “law and order” stance to fixing the country’s “inner cities” that chafed some blacks during the campaign.

Thursday’s flap also put Ryan in the political spotlight for the second time in a week, as reports surfaced of her heated confrontat­ion with Trump aide Omarosa Manigault in the White House press office.

In conflictin­g accounts, Ryan accused Manigault of physical and verbal intimidati­on, including a warning that the White House kept “dossiers” on black journalist­s — something the White House denied. Ryan also said her friendship with Manigault became estranged after Manigault accused her of an improper relationsh­ip with Democrat Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign. Manigault denied the accusation­s.

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