Trump’s
first try at pivoting to Harris blows up in his face
The former
president suggested Harris only recently “became” Black.
By Eli
Stokols
07/31/2024
05:30 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/07/31/donald-trump-kamala-harris-race-attacks-00172149
Former
President Donald Trump on Wednesday took his first big swing Wednesday at the
revamped Democratic ticket — and it did not go well for him.
Trump
participated in a controversial live interview at a convention of Black
journalists in Chicago and quickly stumbled into racially insensitive remarks
about Vice President Kamala Harris as he questioned her identity and
qualifications.
When asked
about Republicans who say Harris, the first woman of Black and Asian ancestry
to serve as vice president, was chosen for the role in a nod to diversity,
Trump instead suggested Harris only recently “became” Black.
“She was
always of Indian heritage and she was only promoting Indian heritage,” Trump
said, prompting audible gasps and murmurs, according to reporters in the room.
“I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago until she happened to
turn Black and now she wants to be known as Black.”
Trump
continued to make the same point about Harris’ ancestry even as one of the
moderators, ABC News’ Rachel Scott, interjected that Harris attended an
historically Black college and has always identified as Black.
His remarks,
one of many tense exchanges in a Q&A session at the National Association of
Black Journalists, underscored the Trump campaign’s floundering efforts to
blunt the momentum of Harris since President Joe Biden agreed to drop his
reelection bid.
The
interview marked Trump’s first major attempt to pivot a campaign designed to
defeat Biden toward a younger and more challenging opponent, and laid bare the
difficulties the Republican nominee and his movement more broadly may have in
taking on a woman of color without veering into misogynistic, racist invective.
While many in Trump’s base may agree with his blunt assessment of Harris as a
political token, it may reinforce the former president’s vulnerabilities with
swing voters heading into the final stretch of what looks to be a very close
election.
Just hours
after the event, Trump appeared to double down on the idea that people of mixed
backgrounds can’t identify as more than one ethnicity, posting a video on his
Truth Social account showing Harris, in his words, “saying she’s Indian, not
Black” and calling her a “stone cold phony.”
Harris’
campaign communications director Michael Tyler said in a “Statement on Donald
Trump Showing Exactly Who He Is at NABJ” that the former president’s “tirade is
simply a taste of the chaos and division that has been a hallmark of Trump’s
MAGA rallies this entire campaign.”
Trump’s
comments about Harris’ mixed heritage drew an immediate rebuke from the White
House, where press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was read Trump’s quote
questioning Harris’ race during a press briefing.
“As a person
of color, as a Black woman in this position … what he just said, what you just
read out to me is repulsive, it’s insulting,” Jean-Pierre said in response. “No
one has any right to tell someone how they identify. “
But at least
one Republican was incensed by the comments.
“Nobody’s
helping the voters out here by talking about the substance of the issue which
we should be focusing on,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).
While
Murkowski has long soured on Trump’s candidacy, she chastised the GOP ticket’s
cultural commentary, including Sen. JD Vance’s remarks that women who don’t
reproduce are “childless cat ladies.”
“We’re
getting spun up about cats and children. And now how somebody looks,” she said.
“Does it make any difference how much Polish ancestry versus Irish versus
whatever else it is that I have in me? Why are we talking about this?”
Trump’s
entire 34-minute exchange with Scott and two other journalists on stage was
contentious, as the GOP nominee groused about not being able to hear the
questions, a delayed start that he blamed on the conference’s own technical
problems and Harris’ decision not to appear before the National Association of
Black Journalists.
In his most
watched public appearance since Harris took over for Biden atop the Democratic
ticket, Trump’s coarse, cutting and at times snappish responses, including
calling one of Scott’s questions “nasty,” showed him to be very much the same
person he has always been despite the assassination attempt earlier this month
that he initially claimed had changed his outlook and approach.
The
interview marked Trump’s first major attempt to pivot a campaign designed to
defeat Biden toward a younger and more challenging opponent, and laid bare the
difficulties the Republican nominee and his movement more broadly may have in
taking on a woman of color without veering into misogynistic, racist invective.
| Jamie Kelter Davis for POLITICO
The
interview, which began an hour late, was supposed to go for an hour. But it
abruptly ended after 34 minutes, which moderator Kadia Goba of Semafor said was
at the behest of Trump’s campaign.
But by that
point, the damage had been done.
“Looking
forward to the editorials calling for @realDonaldTrump to get out of the race
following today’s performance,” Ben LaBolt, the White House communications
director, posted from his personal account on X.
Anthony
Scaramucci, the venture capitalist and former Trump ally who served as his
White House communications director for 11 days, posted: “Whoever told him to
do this interview should be fired.”
Republican
strategist Shermichael Singleton, who appeared on CNN moments after Trump
walked off the stage in Chicago, was even more blunt: “You need to be careful
with this crap,” he warned. “As far as every Black person in America is
concerned, she is Black. … To question the vice president’s ethnicity — I can’t
even say what I really want to say about this.”
He added: “I
think a lot of Black people will watch this appearance and then they will point
to the former president and they will point to the Republican Party and say
this is why we will never give you all the majority of our support.”
Harris’
campaign, in a sign of just how damaging they believed Trump’s performance may
have been to his own efforts to woo Black voters and independents, blasted out
eight different clips from the interview, including Trump’s use of the term
“Black jobs” and his inability to defend Vance in response to multiple
questions about his past comments maligning “childless cat ladies” and his
readiness to lead on day one.
“Historically,
the vice president, in terms of the election, does not have any impact,” Trump
said. “Typically, the choice of a vice president makes no difference. You’re
voting for the president.”
Trump also
attacked Harris as Biden’s “border czar,” repeated his desire to pardon those
convicted of crimes for taking part in the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the
Capitol and asserted that Black voters should vote Republican primarily for
economic reasons.
But those
comments were overshadowed by the former president’s indelicate churlishness on
racial matters.
In his most
watched public appearance since Harris took over for Biden atop the Democratic
ticket, Trump’s coarse, cutting and at times snappish responses showed him to
be very much the same person he has always been despite the assassination
attempt earlier this month that he initially claimed had changed his outlook
and approach. | Jamie Kelter Davis for POLITICO
Trump took
issue with the first question he was asked, as Scott ticked off a number of
past comments that many have seen as racist: questioning former President
Barack Obama’s American citizenship, telling four congresswomen of color to go
back to where they came from, describing Black district attorneys as animals
and attacking Black journalists for questions he deemed “stupid.”
“Why should
Black voters trust you after you’ve used language like that?” Scott said.
Trump
responded defensively: “I don’t think I’ve ever been asked a question in such a
horrible manner.” He called ABC a “fake news network” and dismissed Scott’s
question as “disgraceful.”
But his
response to the DEI question moments later only further clarified why it had
been asked.
Eugene
Daniels and Anthony Adragna contributed to this report.
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