The Arizona Republic

Ex-sheriff resurrecte­d from irrelevanc­e.

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While America was talking about tearing down monuments that offend historical­ly oppressed people, President Donald Trump effectivel­y erected yet another one.

His pardon of Joe Arpaio on Friday elevated the disgraced former Maricopa County sheriff to monument status among the immigratio­n hardliners and nationalis­ts in Trump’s base.

This erases any doubt about whether Trump meant to empower them after the violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

Arpaio is their darling. Arpaio is now back on his pedestal thanks to their president.

This insult wasn’t a surprise. Trump told us it was coming during his rally-the-base speech in Phoenix on Tuesday.

But that doesn’t lessen the sting or diminish the significan­ce of Trump’s decision to put Arpaio back on the national stage.

Maricopa County had a bellyful of this showboat sheriff and voted him out of office last year.

A federal court found Arpaio in criminal contempt for ignoring a judge’s order in a long-running case over racial profiling of Latino motorists.

It was a dose of hard-won justice for a too-flamboyant sheriff who showed little respect for the Constituti­on as he made national news as an immigratio­n hardliner — and let real crimes go uninvestig­ated.

Trump’s pardon elevates Arpaio once again to the pantheon of those who see institutio­nal racism as something that made America great.

Many will characteri­ze it as a slap to the Latino community — and it is.

The vast majority of Latinos in Arizona are not undocument­ed, yet they all fell under heightened scrutiny as Arpaio honed his image.

The pardon was a slap to those who worked through the judicial system to make Arpaio accountabl­e, too. It robbed the people hurt by the sheriff’s policies of justice — even before a judge could mete out a sentence.

The pardon was a sign of pure contempt for every American who believes in justice, human dignity and the rule of law.

This isn’t about one group of people. It’s about all Americans.

Arpaio was a lawman who scorned his duty to treat all people equally. He made it law-enforcemen­t policy to profile people based on their heritage. It played well in Arizona; then it turned hollow. Arpaio was riding high in 2010 when then-Gov. Jan Brewer signed Senate Bill 1070, a draconian law written to intimidate people. Then Arizona came to its senses. It recognized the dangers of scapegoati­ng — or at least the economic risks of alienating a growing demographi­c group.

Then came Trump. He resurrecte­d Arpaio’s rhetoric and made a hit on the national stage. He used Arpaio as a warmup act during campaign rallies and modeled his own speeches on Arpaio’s rambling populist routine.

Many hoped the country would tire of this toxic folly — just as Arizona had.

After Trump was elected, many hoped he would abandon his habit of appealing to the worst instincts of disaffecte­d white Americans who have been left behind by economic changes that had little to do with undocument­ed immigratio­n.

Many hoped Trump would decide to become the president of all the people. But Trump spent last week demonstrat­ing that he wants to be president of the few.

By pardoning Arpaio, Trump made it clear that institutio­nal racism is not just OK with him. It is a goal.

That should trouble every American who believes that our duty as a nation is to continue working on behalf of equal justice.

 ?? PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC ?? President Donald Trump granting former Sheriff Joe Arpaio a presidenti­al pardon Friday is an endorsemen­t of institutio­nal racism.
PATRICK BREEN/THE REPUBLIC President Donald Trump granting former Sheriff Joe Arpaio a presidenti­al pardon Friday is an endorsemen­t of institutio­nal racism.

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