Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
How to Beat Trump? Democrats Divided as He Rams Race Onto Ballot
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
July 19, 2019

Share

LOS ANGELES — Joe Biden was at a soul food restaurant in Los Angeles on Thursday when he blasted President Donald Trump’s “racist” taunts at a rally the night before.
“This is about dividing the country,” the early Democratic front-runner, who has been criticized for his own handling of race, told reporters. “This is about dividing and raising the issue of racism across the country because that’s his base, that’s what he’s pushing.”

“They should absolutely not respond to ignorance. They should stay focused on the issues.” — Michael Fisher, an African American pastor from Compton
But Michael Fisher, an African American pastor from Compton who attended the event, warned Democrats to ignore Trump.
“They should absolutely not respond to ignorance,” Fischer said. “They should stay focused on the issues.”
That tension previews the uncomfortable balancing act Democrats will face in the nearly 16 months before Election Day. Trump’s escalating exploitation of racism puts the rawest divide in American life squarely on the ballot in 2020. Democrats are united in condemning his words and actions, but the question of how to counter them is much more complicated.
The party’s passionate left wing is pressing for an all-in battle, arguing that candidates’ plans to combat racism are just as important as their proposals to provide health insurance to every American. But others question whether race should be the centerpiece of the campaign to replace Trump. Several presidential candidates, meanwhile, reject the debate as a false choice, arguing they can criticize Trump for racist tactics while still advancing proposals on health care, education, the minimum wage and more.

The Challenge Was Clear

The emotionally charged developments shook both political parties on Thursday, a day after Trump continued his verbal assault against four minority congresswomen, this time at a raucous rally in North Carolina. The president’s supporters chanted “Send her back!” after Trump criticized Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Muslim who fled to the U.S. as a child from violence-wracked Somalia.
While Trump tried to distance himself from the chant on Thursday, it echoed his own comments from earlier in the week when he said the “squad” of four young Democratic congresswomen, including New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, should “go back” to their “crime-infested places” overseas. They are all American citizens.
After successfully campaigning on health care during last year’s midterm elections, Democrats hoped to adopt a similar “kitchen table” strategy going into 2020 that would focus on issues that appeal to all voters. Yet Trump has forced them into a moment of decision that could send the party in a far less certain direction.
The challenge was clear Thursday when Trump’s remarks consumed the 2020 debate even as Democrats on Capitol Hill voted to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025. The vote was the latest move by Democrats to highlight their work on more traditional issues that helped them seize the House majority last fall. Yet it barely made a ripple in the national debate.
“Trump is forcing the hand of Democratic Party leaders thinking they could thread the needle. They can’t. He’s holding Klan rallies,” said Aimee Allison, who leads She the People, an advocacy group focused on women of color. “We have to be strong in the face of that and unafraid.”

A Question of Whether to Follow Trump Into Racial Debate

Democratic pollster Cornell Belcher said that to pretend racism and division aren’t top-tier concerns for voters is a fallacy.

“That wasn’t because voters all of a sudden fell in love with Democrats. That was about the direction of this country and people being uncomfortable and alarmed with what’s happening with the Republican Party under Trump.” Democratic pollster Cornell Belcher
“This is just as important an issue for Democrats to engage and win on as health care, education and wages,” he said, pointing out that Democrats got 9 million more votes than Republicans in the 2018 midterm elections.
“That wasn’t because voters all of a sudden fell in love with Democrats. That was about the direction of this country and people being uncomfortable and alarmed with what’s happening with the Republican Party under Trump.”
But others question whether to follow Trump into the racial debate at all, concerned about alienating white working-class voters who may have backed Trump in the past and are uncomfortable with allegations of racism or bigotry.
“Calling him racist, which he is, I don’t know if that helps,” said North Carolina-based Democratic strategist Gary Pearce. He called Trump’s message “profoundly disturbing, but I know it works.”
In the battleground state of Wisconsin, Democratic Party Chairman Ben Wikler called on his party to take a cautious approach by explaining that Trump is using racism to distract voters from failing policies.
Photo of President Donald Trump
President Trump speaks during a Cabinet meeting at the White House on Tuesday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Democratic Party’s 2020 Class Weighed In

“Trump’s use of racism as a political weapon is his only strategy to distract the public from the No. 1 issue in 2018, which was health care,” Wikler said. “He can’t claim that he stands for working people in 2020.”
Most of the Democratic Party’s crowded 2020 class weighed in on the Trump-race question — some more aggressively than others.
Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren left no doubt about her position: “#IStandWithIlhan against attacks from this racist president,” she tweeted.
New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who is black, condemned Trump’s attacks on the squad but also sought to distance himself from Ocasio-Cortez’s description of immigrant detention centers along the southern border as “concentration camps.”
“I would not choose that, because you start to begin to create historical comparisons that I do not think are constructive,” he said. “But (the spirit is) pointing out the outrageous assault on humanity that’s going on within our own borders . It’s an assault on the humanity of all of us.”
New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand called Trump “un-American.”
“His constant attacks on women of color in Congress just show what a small, weak president he is,” she said in a brief interview, while trying to pivot to the economy.
“You can talk about both,” she said. “Absolutely. You have to. You have to lead on both issues.”

Republicans Grapple With Racial Debate

Juan Rodriguez, the campaign manager for Kamala Harris, said the California senator would call out Trump on the campaign trail for “vile and reprehensible” comments at every opportunity but would also talk about her policy solutions.

“We ought to tone the rhetoric down across the country using — throwing around words like racism, you know, kind of routinely applying it to almost everything.” — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
Harris will “not be distracted by a person, who, the way she’d characterize, is weak and wants to stoke fear,” Rodriguez said.
Republicans, too, are grappling with the racial debate that could have profound long-term consequences on the GOP’s ability to win elections in an increasingly diverse nation.
Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina, who called the chant “offensive,” was among about 10 House GOP leaders who had breakfast Thursday with Vice President Mike Pence in Washington. Walker said he cautioned Pence that attention to the chant could distract voters next year from the economy and other themes Republicans want to emphasize.
Pence concurred and said he would discuss it with Trump, said another participant in the meeting who described the conversation on condition of anonymity.
Publicly, however, the overwhelming majority of Republican elected officials stood behind the president or offered tepid criticism.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell suggested Trump’s critics were going too far by accusing him of racism.
“We ought to tone the rhetoric down across the country using — throwing around words like racism, you know, kind of routinely applying it to almost everything,” he told Fox Business Network.

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Alum Davante Adams Returns to California, Signs with Rams

DON'T MISS

Small Earthquake Rattles Southern California

DON'T MISS

Tribes and Students Sue Trump Administration Over Firings at Native Schools

DON'T MISS

A Single-Engine Plane Crashes Near a Pennsylvania Airport. All 5 Aboard Are Taken to Hospitals.

DON'T MISS

Secret Service Shoots Armed Man Near the White House

DON'T MISS

Super Bowl Stars Josh Sweat and Milton Williams Headline a List of NFL Free Agents

DON'T MISS

ICE Arrests Palestinian Activist Who Helped Lead Columbia University Protests

DON'T MISS

Ex-Central Banker Mark Carney to Become Canada’s Next Prime Minister

DON'T MISS

Israel Cuts off Electricity Supply to Gaza, Affecting a Desalination Plant Producing Drinking Water

DON'T MISS

Tens of Thousands of Mexicans Rally With President to Celebrate US Decision to Delay Tariffs

UP NEXT

Mystery Solved? A Submerged Car From the 1950s May Belong to a Missing Oregon Family

UP NEXT

Donald Trump’s Job Approval Rating Hits Lowest of 2nd Term

UP NEXT

Sylvester Turner, Sworn In as US Representative in January, Dies at 70

UP NEXT

Powerful US Storms Create Blizzard Conditions and Threaten to Spawn More Tornadoes

UP NEXT

Trump’s Address to Congress Showed the Country’s Stark Partisan Divide

UP NEXT

California Juvenile Detention Officers Staged ‘Gladiator Fights’ Between Youth, Indictment Says

UP NEXT

Mexican Cartel Leader AKA ‘Hummer’ Pleads Guilty to Drug Trafficking

UP NEXT

Trump Administration Plans to Close Over 110 IRS Assistance Centers

UP NEXT

Joseph Wambaugh, Author With a Cop’s-Eye View, Is Dead at 88

UP NEXT

Californians Split on Trump, Newsom, and the State’s Future

A Single-Engine Plane Crashes Near a Pennsylvania Airport. All 5 Aboard Are Taken to Hospitals.

9 hours ago

Secret Service Shoots Armed Man Near the White House

10 hours ago

Super Bowl Stars Josh Sweat and Milton Williams Headline a List of NFL Free Agents

10 hours ago

ICE Arrests Palestinian Activist Who Helped Lead Columbia University Protests

10 hours ago

Ex-Central Banker Mark Carney to Become Canada’s Next Prime Minister

10 hours ago

Israel Cuts off Electricity Supply to Gaza, Affecting a Desalination Plant Producing Drinking Water

10 hours ago

Tens of Thousands of Mexicans Rally With President to Celebrate US Decision to Delay Tariffs

10 hours ago

Mystery Solved? A Submerged Car From the 1950s May Belong to a Missing Oregon Family

17 hours ago

A Day of Trump-Musk Cost-Cutting Overhauls Federal Government

18 hours ago

Traveling Abroad? If You’re Paying With Dollars, Your Trip Is on Sale.

1 day ago

Fresno State Alum Davante Adams Returns to California, Signs with Rams

LOS ANGELES — Receiver Davante Adams agreed to terms on a two-year deal with the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday, bringing the three-time All-Pro...

9 hours ago

9 hours ago

Fresno State Alum Davante Adams Returns to California, Signs with Rams

The aftermath of the Palisades fire, in Malibu, Calif., Jan. 17, 2025. Residents of parts of Los Angeles County on Sunday afternoon felt a minor earthquake centered west of Malibu, Calif. and preliminary estimates showed that the quake had a magnitude of 4.1, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. (Mark Abramson/The New York Times)
9 hours ago

Small Earthquake Rattles Southern California

A "Justice for HINU” sign rests at the base of a statue on the lawn at the entrance of Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas, Feb. 25, 2025. A group of Native American tribes and students is suing the Trump administration to reverse its recent firing of federal workers at Native schools that they said has severely lowered their quality of education. (Chase Castor/The New York Times)
9 hours ago

Tribes and Students Sue Trump Administration Over Firings at Native Schools

First responders work the scene after a plane crashed in the parking lot of a retirement community in Manheim Township, Pa., Sunday, March 9, 2025. (Logan Gehman/LNP/LancasterOnline via AP)
9 hours ago

A Single-Engine Plane Crashes Near a Pennsylvania Airport. All 5 Aboard Are Taken to Hospitals.

The White House in Washington, Feb. 6, 2025. The Secret Service shot a man near the White House early Sunday around midnight on Saturday after an “armed confrontation” with law enforcement officers, the agency said in a statement. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
10 hours ago

Secret Service Shoots Armed Man Near the White House

Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Josh Sweat (19) reacts after sacking Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes during the first half of the NFL Super Bowl 59 football game, Sunday, Feb. 9, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP/Matt Slocum)
10 hours ago

Super Bowl Stars Josh Sweat and Milton Williams Headline a List of NFL Free Agents

Student negotiator Mahmoud Khalil is on the Columbia University campus in New York at a pro-Palestinian protest encampment on April 29, 2024. (AP File)
10 hours ago

ICE Arrests Palestinian Activist Who Helped Lead Columbia University Protests

Liberal Party of Canada leadership candidate Mark Carney delivers a speech as he's introduced during the Liberal leadership announcement in Ottawa, Ontario, Sunday, March 9, 2025. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP)
10 hours ago

Ex-Central Banker Mark Carney to Become Canada’s Next Prime Minister

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend