After New Zealand attack, Trump rapped for ‘silence’ on white supremacist threat

White House chief of staff forced to deny any affinity between the US president’s anti-immigration rhetoric and the accused Christchurch shooter’s extremist views

US President Donald Trump waves as he boards his motorcade vehicle after he and First Lady Melania Trump attend a service at Saint John's Church in Washington, DC, March 17, 2019. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
US President Donald Trump waves as he boards his motorcade vehicle after he and First Lady Melania Trump attend a service at Saint John's Church in Washington, DC, March 17, 2019. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

WASHINGTON, DC (AFP) — Democrats led by an Arab-American lawmaker attacked US President Donald Trump’s “silence” on the rise of white supremacy Sunday, as reaction to the New Zealand mosque massacre spilled into a heated debate over religious and racial bigotry.

With controversy swirling over Trump’s tepid response to the massacre, White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney was forced to deny any affinity between the president’s anti-immigration rhetoric and the accused Christchurch shooter’s extremist views.

“The president is not a white supremacist,” Mulvaney said in an interview with Fox News Sunday.

But on a separate Sunday talk show, Rashida Tlaib, a Democrat from Detroit and one of the first two Muslim women ever elected to the US Congress, charged that the president’s failure to speak out forcefully against white supremacy was making the country less safe.

Rashida Tlaib, a Democrat from Michigan then running for the US House of Representatives, is interviewed by Democracy Now! on August 16, 2018. (Screen capture: YouTube)

“Trump is the most powerful man in the world right now,” she said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “He, from the Oval Office, from that power position, can be able to send a signal very loud and clear.”

“We’ve done this in the past against foreign terrorism. We need to do it on domestic terrorism, against white supremacy that’s growing every single day that we stay silent.”

After the attack on two mosques in Christchurch on Friday, which left 50 dead, Trump expressed sympathy and solidarity with the victims and people of New Zealand.

But in comments to reporters in the Oval Office, he dismissed concerns that white nationalism represented a growing danger around the world.

“I don’t really. I think it’s a small group of people that have very, very serious problems, I guess,” Trump said.

Trump ‘a symbol’

The alleged gunman — identified as an Australian white nationalist — livestreamed the assault on social media and published a manifesto filled with racist conspiracy theories.

He also referred to Trump as “a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose.”

At the grassroots level, the New Zealand attacks triggered a surge of solidarity from America’s Jewish and Christian communities, with hundreds of people taking part in interfaith vigils from Cincinnati to Philadelphia, Pasadena to New York.

People wait outside a mosque in central Christchurch, New Zealand, March 15, 2019. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)

But it also resounded in a US political scene already supercharged by controversy over remarks by Ilhan Omar — the only other Muslim woman in Congress along with Tlaib — that supporters of Israel and many fellow Democrats perceived as anti-Semitic.

The debate over bigotry quickly shifted to Trump after the atrocity in New Zealand.

“Time and time again, this president has embraced and emboldened white supremacists — and instead of condemning racist terrorists, he covers for them. This isn’t normal or acceptable,” tweeted Kirsten Gillibrand, who formally entered the Democratic race for the White House Sunday.

Mulvaney scoffed at the idea that Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric and policies had anything to do with the New Zealand attack.

“Let’s take what happened in New Zealand yesterday for what it is — a terrible evil, tragic act and figure out why those things are becoming more prevalent in the world. Is it Donald Trump? Absolutely not.

Charlottesville

At key moments of his presidency, however, Trump has soft-pedaled the danger of white nationalism, most famously when he found blame “on both sides” after a “Unite the Right” rally turned violent in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017.

In that case, a neo-Nazi sympathizer drove into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing a young woman and injuring 19.

Illustrative: A white supremacist carrying a Nazi flag into Emancipation Park in Charlottesville, Virginia, August 12, 2017. (AP/Steve Helber)

Former vice president Joe Biden, a possible Trump challenger in 2020, evoked Trump’s response to Charlottesville in a campaign-style speech in Delaware Saturday.

“Our children were listening. Our silence is complicity. With these words, the president of the United States assigned a moral equivalence between those spreading hate and those with the courage to stand against it,” he said.

“And in that moment, I knew the threat to this nation was unlike any I had seen in my lifetime.”

Trump has avoided the subject of white nationalism on Twitter, where he instead fired off a string of messages in support of Jeanine Pirro, a Fox News host reprimanded by the network for remarks widely criticized as Islamophobic.

This combination photo shows Fox News host Jeanine Pirro at the HBO Documentary Series premiere of “THE JINX: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” in New York on January 28, 2015, left, and Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., at a rally outside the Capitol in Washington on March 8, 2019. (AP Photo)

A former federal judge, Pirro had questioned whether the Muslim faith of Ilhan Omar, the Democrat accused of anti-Semitism, prevented her from supporting the US Constitution.

Pirro’s show, “Justice with Judge Jeanine” has been off the air since then.

“Bring back @JudgeJeanine Pirro. The Radical Left Democrats, working closely with their beloved partner, the Fake News Media, is using every trick in the book to SILENCE a majority of our Country,” Trump tweeted.

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