Rob HorowitzWhen the ‘Mooch’ and Geraldo--two usually passionate and reflexive defenders of the president--can no longer go along, that is as good a sign as any that President Trump reached a new low last week in his constant efforts to mine our nation’s racial divisions for his own political benefit, no matter how high the cost.
Both businessman and short-time White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci and Fox News personality Geraldo Rivera sharply criticized the president for his tweets urging four progressive Democrats of color, Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (MN.) Ayanna Pressley (MA.) and Rashida Tlaib (MI), to go back to the countries they came from. President Trump’s use of this age-old racist trope reached a crescendo when he basked in his supporters loudly and repetitively chanting ‘Send Her Back’ at last week’s re-election rally in North Carolina.
To their credit, Scaramucci and Rivera minced no words, calling the President’s tweets plainly racist. Nearly all the rest of the president’s supporters, whether in Congress or the media, unfortunately, did not follow suit. Ranging from House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (CA) to The Five’s Greg Gutfeld, Trump’s allies twisted reality beyond recognition as they attempted to argue that the “Send her back’ chant was somehow divorced from the Trump tweets that triggered it or that Trump’s attack on the four Congresswomen was about policy and ideology, not race and nationality.
It is certainly the case that the Democratic Representatives who call themselves ‘the squad’ are ripe political targets. Their political views on some topics are out of the mainstream, they have said a number of unwise and provocative things and have been highly critical of Trump, If the president was going after them on their views that is fair game and elevating them through his criticism to be more visible symbols of the Democratic Party is no doubt good politics.
But the president is not mainly attacking them for what they believe, but for their racial and ethnic identities, returning to his crabbed and narrow blood and soil vision of the nation. In Trump’s thinly veiled, if veiled at all, opinion, white people automatically belong and everyone else is ‘’other’’-- people who must demonstrate their gratitude and don’t really have the same rights to offer criticisms and ideas for how to make our nation better.
This racial division is Trump’s go to move time and again, even though for a general electorate it is a dead solid loser. It is how he spent the last two weeks of the 2018 mid-terms, moving suburban voters in swing districts away from the Republican candidates, resulting in the largest Democratic pick-up of seats since the 1974 post-Watergate election. Polling done in the aftermath of Trump’s ‘go back to where you came from’ tweets and comments last week showed similarly negative results, with an overwhelming majority of Americans expressing their disapproval.
Most Americans understand that our exceptionalism is derived from the fact we are a nation founded on an ideal that ‘all men are created equal’ and that throughout our imperfect history we have progressed towards this goal, striving for ‘a more perfect union’ They also understand that immigrants renew our nation, strengthening us economically and culturally.
On this question, they stand with President Reagan--not President Trump--in the true American spirit he expressed in his farewell address, where he explained why he believed our nation was a Shining City on a Hill. “After 200 years, two centuries, she still stands strong and true on the granite ridge, and her glow has held steady no matter what storm. And she's still a beacon, still a magnet for all who must have freedom, for all the pilgrims from all the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness, toward home.”
That is the unifying vision that implicitly grasps that our diversity is one of our main sources of strength-- a vision that President Trump in his ugly actions and racially incendiary words rejects every day. It is one of the prime reasons he is manifestly unfit to hold the office and incapable of governing this great nation.
Rob Horowitz is a strategic and communications consultant who provides general consulting, public relations, direct mail services and polling for national and state issue organizations, various non-profits and elected officials and candidates. He is an Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Rhode Island.
19 to Watch in 2019 - FULL LIST
Angie Armenise
Chef and co-owner of Blackie’s Bulldog Tavern in Smithfield, Angie Armenise has it all going. Expansion to a new and larger location, a wonderfully loyal customer base and a big stack of awards -- and more to come in the new year. READ MORE
Marcela Betancur
Marcela Betancur, the new head of Latino Policy Institute at Roger Williams University and will be the power behind Latinx think tank in 2019.
Betancur, a Central Falls native, most recently worked READ MORE
Brian Goldner
No one will influence the psyche of Rhode Island more this year than Hasbro CEO Brian Goldner. After the loss of the PawSox to Worcester and the closing of Rhode Island’s beloved Benny's in 2017, Rhode Islanders are a bit raw.
He is poised to announce that Hasbro is...READ MORE
Cortney Nicolato
New United Way of Rhode Island President and CEO Cortney Nicolato succeeded Anthony Maione in 2018 — and takes on her first full year at the helm of the social service organization in 2019.
She is a Rhode Islander turned Texan returned back to Rhode Island. The Pawtucket native is all about Rhode Island and is passionate about helping to improve issues of housing affordability and the quality of education in RI. She is the mother of two elementary school-aged children. READ MORE
Sabina Matos
It is the rise of the Phoenix in Providence. On Monday, Sabina Matos won back the Presidency of the Providence City Council and returns to the top legislative position in the City of Providence.
As Providence goes so goes Rhode Island. Matos will be faced with taking on some of the most difficult issues in the state. READ MORE
Jamie Bova
The Newport City Councilor At-Large lined up the votes to votes for Mayor after being elected to just her second term on the Newport City Council this past November.
Bova, an engineer who grew up in Middletown, attended URI, and moved to Newport in 2012, succeeds Harry Winthrop as the city faces major changes ahead for 2019, including the construction of a new hotel on Thames Street — and more hotel proposals in the pipeline — and READ MORE
Jennifer Wood
The former private practice attorney turned top government aide turned non-profit director might have her biggest — and most public — battle on her hands in 2019.
RI Center for Justice Executive Director Jennifer Wood joined GoLocal News Editor on GoLocal LIVE where she spoke to the next steps after filing a federal class-action lawsuit in late November on behalf of all Rhode Island public school students to establish the right, under the U.S. Constitution, to an adequate education to prepare young people for full civic education.
In 2018, Bishop Tobin with the Diocese of Providence landed on GoLocal's “18 to Watch” as the Catholic Church was — and continues to remain — at the center of lawsuits pertaining to the collapse of the St. Joseph pension fund.
He’ll remain squarely in the spotlight — and not for good — in 2019, when he has pledged to release a list of names of abusive priests “credibly accused” over the years in the Diocese, as pressure mounts nationally for how sexual abuse claims were handled around the country — READ MORE
Matt Voskuil
One of Newport’s most iconic — and upscale — dining locations has a new look, a new chef — and people are taking note not just in Newport, but beyond.
Executive Chef and Director of Food and Beverage, Matt Voskuil at the newly opened Cara at the Chanler READ MORE
David Torchiana
The most powerful person in healthcare in Rhode Island may soon be a man who rarely visits the state and few here know his name.
Dr. David Torchiana is the CEO of Partners HealthCare and he is poised to push through an acquisition of Rhode Island’s second largest hospital group, ending the local control over three of Rhode Island’s most important healthcare assets. And, the deal has the potential of putting in peril thousands of Rhode Island jobs through consolidation. READ MORE
RI GOP Party Chair
Rhode Island Republican Party Chair Brandon Bell was defeated in his run for the General Assembly in 2018.
Republican Cranston Mayor Allan Fung lost in his second attempt at the Rhode Island Governor’s office, after a bruising primary that saw former opponent and House Minority Leader opt to endorse former Republican-turned-independent (and honorary chair for President Donald Trump’s campaign in Rhode Island) Joe Trillo. READ MORE
Anthony Baro
Anthony Baro heads Newport-based PowerDocks — one of Rhode Island’s most interesting startups. It is a market-making green tech company that, in many ways, combines the best of Rhode Island.
The emerging maritime renewal energy company is having an impact in the U.S. and globally. READ MORE
Blake Filippi
Blake Filippi is the new House Minority leader and is a fresh-faced leader for the GOP in Rhode Island. But, he faces a number of challenges. READ MORE
Desmond Cambridge
Brown University sophomore basketball player Desmond Cambridge has been a human highlight film his first year and a half on College Hill. He won Ivy League Freshman of the Year and this year he is READ MORE
Sarah Markey
South Kingstown School Board member Sarah Markey has been at the center of controversy since her election in November.
Markey, a top labor leader for the RI National Education Association, has drawn criticism by Democrats, Republicans and multiple municipal attorneys because READ MORE
Peter Neronha
Peter Neronha, the new Attorney General, takes over for the controversial Peter Kilmartin. The former U.S. Attorney for Providence now faces a far busier assignment than his federal one. READ MORE
Dylan Conley
Dylan Conley seems to be everywhere. Recently, GoLocal featured the attorney as one of Rhode Island's "Emerging Leaders."
He is the chairman of the Providence Board of Licenses and is in a hotbed READ MORE
Mike McGovern
Chef Mike McGovern -- formerly the chef at Red Stripe -- is taking the helm at East Greenwich's Kai Bar -- and now 241 Main Sports Bar and Grill.
Kai Bar is a combination of small plates and big drinks, “Kai offers a rotating small plates menu from an award-winning Chef and Craft Cocktails READ MORE
BIg Tourism Voids
Tourism is one of the most important sectors of the Rhode Island economy and two of the most important positions in the state are now vacant. READ MORE
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