By: Stephen Collinson – CNN.com – July 16, 2019
Washington’s newest political force — the four progressive women of color hit by racist Donald Trump tweets — are determined not to take the President’s bait, but they’re not going to take his attacks, either.
The verbal battle, whose origins lie with the immigration debate, is now in Day 3 and has escalated into a watershed moment on race.
The confrontation has become a focal point that is showcasing two opposite political forces in American society — the white, nativist vision being pushed by Trump in his 2020 campaign and the diverse, exceedingly liberal group of women — two of whom are Muslim — who are rising forces in the Democratic Party.
Both Trump and the group known as the “The Squad” — Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts — aren’t shying away from the fight.
It’s rooted in conflicting ideas about what it means to be an American and is electrifying the grassroots bases of each party. And it ultimately could have a profound impact on the political direction of the nation after 2020.
The President wants to portray the four women and their left-wing policies on the environment, on foreign policy and issues like health care as the America-hating, communist face of the Democratic Party.
The “squad” is made up of members elected in the 2018 midterms as part of a backlash against Trump’s divisive brand of politics and are they now beginning escalate their attempts to confront him. It’s unlikely that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Democratic presidential candidates want the group to play a prominent role in 2020 given their hope of capturing more moderate, anti-Trump voters.
“I want to tell children across this country … that no matter what the President says, this country belongs to you, and it belongs to everyone,” said Ocasio-Cortez of New York.
The controversy erupted when Trump — as always seeking to rouse his political base — used one of the most basic racial tropes when he tweeted that the women, all of whom are US citizens, should “go back” to where they came from.
He refused to back down on Monday in an episode that reflects his tendency to set groups of Americans against one another and his confidence that he will not lose the backing of the Republican Party he has reshaped in his image.
“It doesn’t concern me because many people agree with me,” Trump said, implicitly arguing that racist positions are permissible if they are shared by large numbers of people.
Monday’s clash has been brewing for days. The four members of Congress have been among the most vehement critics of Trump’s border policies and several of them visited facilities for undocumented migrants and condemned the President in emotional terms.
The party risks being tainted for years by Trump’s racial strategies that could hamper its chances of appealing to an increasingly diverse nation once the President has left the White House.
Trump’s bet
In all three cases, Trump made conscious decisions to use and then double down on racial sensitivities to exploit national societal divides to bolster his own political position.
His expansion of his attacks Monday on the liberal quartet known as “the squad” was clearly calculated. He spoke from behind a podium bearing the presidential seal and from typed remarks, edited with a trademark black sharpie. Two saluting Marines stood by as Trump claimed critics like those in the “squad” hated America, should leave if they don’t like it and are communists.
Asked if he was concerned that tweets on Sunday were giving comfort to white supremacists, Trump refused to back down.
“These are people that, in my opinion, hate our country … and all I’m saying, that if they’re not happy here, they can leave,” he said.
Trump created his White House moment on race with the windows of the Lincoln Bedroom, where the 16th President first read the Emancipation Proclamation to his Cabinet, over his left shoulder. One floor above him was the East Room where in 1964, President Lyndon Johnson vowed to “close the springs of racial poison” when he signed the Civil Rights Act.
“We will never be a Socialist or Communist Country. IF YOU ARE NOT HAPPY HERE, YOU CAN LEAVE! It is your choice, and your choice alone. This is about love for America. Certain people HATE our Country,” Trump wrote.
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Source: Trump vs. ‘the Squad’ makes watershed moment in racial politics – CNNPolitics