Extremist
ex-adviser drives ‘anti-white racism’ plan for Trump win – report
This article
is more than 6 months old
Former White
House adviser and white nationalist Stephen Miller plans to reinterpret civil
rights laws should Trump return to power
Martin Pengelly in Washington
Mon 1 Apr 2024 22.23 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/apr/01/trump-stephen-miller-anti-white-racism-plan
The anti-immigration extremist, white nationalist and former
Trump White House adviser Stephen Miller is helping drive a plan to tackle
supposed “anti-white racism” if Donald Trump returns to power next year, Axios
reported.
“Longtime aides and allies … have been laying legal
groundwork with a flurry of lawsuits and legal complaints – some of which have
been successful,” Axios said on Monday.
Should Trump return to power, Axios said, Miller and other
aides plan to “dramatically change the government’s interpretation of civil
rights-era laws to focus on ‘anti-white racism’ rather than discrimination
against people of colour”.
Such an effort would involve “eliminating or upending”
programmes meant to counter racism against non-white groups.
The US supreme court, dominated 6-3 by rightwing justices
after Trump installed three, recently boosted such efforts by ruling against
race-based affirmative action in college admissions.
America First Legal, a group founded by Miller and described
by him as the right’s “long-awaited answer” to the American Civil Liberties
Union, is helping drive plans for a second Trump term, Axios said.
In 2021, an AFL suit blocked implementation of a $29bn
Covid-era Small Business Administration programme that prioritised helping
restaurants owned by women, veterans and people from socially and economically
disadvantaged groups.
Miller called that ruling “the first, but crucial, step
towards ending government-sponsored racial discrimination”.
Recent AFL lawsuits include one against CBS and Paramount
alleging discrimination against a white, straight man who wrote for the show
Seal Team, and a civil rights complaint against the NFL over the “Rooney Rule”,
which says at least two minority candidates must be interviewed for vacant top
positions.
Reports of extremist groups planning for a second Trump
presidency are common, not least around Project 2025, a blueprint for
transition and legislative priorities prepared by the Heritage Foundation, a
hard-right Washington thinktank.
Trump’s spokesperson, Steven Cheung, told Axios: “As
President Trump has said, all staff, offices, and initiatives connected to
[Joe] Biden’s un-American policy will be immediately terminated.”
Throughout Trump’s term in office, Miller was a close
adviser and speechwriter – though one of the 45th president’s less successful
TV surrogates, ridiculed for using “spray-on hair”.
Controversies were numerous. Among them were reported
advocacy for blowing up migrants with drones (which Miller denied); for sending
250,000 US troops to the southern border; and for beheading an Isis leader,
dipping the head in pig’s blood and “parad[ing] it around to warn other
terrorists” (Miller denied it and called the source of the story, the former
defense secretary Mark Esper, a “moron”).
In 2019, after Miller was discovered to have touted white
nationalist articles and books, 55 civil rights groups wrote to Trump,
protesting: “Stephen Miller has stoked bigotry, hate and division with his
extreme political rhetoric and policies throughout his career. The recent
exposure of his deep-seated racism provides further proof that he is unfit to
serve and should immediately leave his post.”
On Monday, Cedric Richmond, co-chair of Biden’s re-election
campaign, said: “It’s not like Donald Trump has been hiding his racism … [but]
he’s making it clear that if he wins in November, he’ll turn his racist record
into official government policy … It’s up to us to stop him.”
Despite his legal advocacy in the cause of eradicating
“anti-white racism”, Miller is not himself a lawyer.
Ty Cobb, a former Trump White House lawyer, recently told
the Guardian those close to the former president were now “looking for lawyers
who worship Trump and will do his bidding. Trump is looking to Miller to pick
people who will be more loyal to Trump than the rule of law.”
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