The Mercury News

Trump whiffs chance to reject racism

After two days of mounting criticism for his failure to condemn white supremacis­ts after Saturday’s Charlottes­ville tragedy, Donald Trump attempted damage control on Monday.

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“Racism is evil and those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacis­ts and other hate groups that are repugnant to what we hold dear as Americans,” he said in a surprise statement at the White House after first touting some economic news.

He did not take questions. No ad-libbing to risk rolling back the point.

Trump’s initial reaction Saturday decried hate in general but did not call out the white supremacis­ts and Ku Klux Klan participat­ing in the Charlottes­ville march. A young woman was killed and others injured when a man with neo-Nazi ties plowed his car into a crowd of peaceful protesters. Others were hurt in skirmishes with belligeren­t marchers.

The march ostensibly was to protest the city’s decision to remove a Robert E. Lee statue. The real agenda was, in the words of former KKK leader David Duke, to be a “turning point” in the movement to help people like him “fulfill the promises of Donald Trump.”

Trump has no trouble calling out ISIS or al-Qaeda by name when they slaughter innocents. After an immigrant murdered Kate Steinle on a San Francisco pier, Trump used the crime to attack all immigrants here illegally.

The Charlottes­ville melée presented Trump with the opportunit­y to finally separate himself from the racist elements of his base. He whiffed. The Monday statement would have been fine as his first reaction. But read from a teleprompt­er just hours after trashing a critic on Twitter, and lacking any acknowledg­ment that he could have been clearer originally, it does not erase the initial impression.

Fortunatel­y, more Republican leaders are stepping up to differenti­ate themselves from their president.

Critics such as Sens. Jeff Flake and Marco Rubio have amped up the rhetoric. But others who have been Trump stalwarts — Sens. Orrin Hatch and Cory Gardner, for example — joined them over the weekend. Vice President Mike Pence, while defending Trump’s original statement, himself emphatical­ly called out the racist groups by name.

Could this finally be what galvanizes the Republican Party to take back its good name? After eight years with a stated mission of causing Barack Obama to fail, and with no significan­t legislatio­n six months after winning the presidency, could the GOP actually get back to governing?

It is possible. In the House, a bipartisan group is discussing immigratio­n reform. Senators of both parties are discussing how to solve the problems of Obamacare instead of taking insurance away from 20 million Americans.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker of the House Paul Ryan still are Trump acolytes. But the more members of their party stand on principle and speak up, the sooner the supposed leaders will have to follow them.

Trump’s initial reaction Saturday decried hate in general but did not call out the white supremacis­ts and Ku Klux Klan participat­ing in the Charlottes­ville march.

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