[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 145 (Monday, September 26, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6073-S6074]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DONALD TRUMP
Mr. REID. Madam President, virtually every time Donald Trump says or
does something discriminatory--and that is often--the media relies upon
a catalog of buzzwords to describe his actions. The press uses words
like hateful, intolerant, bigot, extremist, prejudice, to name but a
few. Yet there is always one word that many of the press conspicuously
avoid: Racist. They never label Trump as a racist, but he is a racist.
Donald Trump is a racist. ``Racist'' is a term I don't really like.
We have all, with rare exception--I don't know who it would be--said
things that are not politically correct, but I don't know of anyone,
when that happens, who doesn't acknowledge it and, if necessary,
apologizes quickly, but Donald Trump doesn't believe the racist things
he does and says are wrong. He says them with the full intent to demean
and to denigrate. That is who he is.
Each time Trump is given a chance to apologize and make amends, he
refuses, and then he doubles down on what he said before. The media is
not holding Donald Trump accountable at all. He is not being held
accountable.
So why do reporters and pundits abstain from calling Trump what he
is--a racist? It is not as if Trump's racism is new. His bigotry has
been on display since the early days of his business career.
When Donald Trump was still working at his father's side as second in
command, the Department of Justice slapped their company with a civil
rights lawsuit. Why? Because they deserved it. Undercover Federal
officers in New York found that the Trumps discriminated against
potential tenants by rejecting applications for housing from African
Americans and Puerto Ricans.
Trump has even had a secret system for discriminatory practices. As
the Washington Post reported:
Trump employees have secretly marked the applications of
minorities with codes, such as `No. 9' and `C' for colored. .
. . The employees allegedly directed blacks and Puerto Ricans
away from buildings with mostly white tenants and steered
them toward properties that had many minorities.
In the 1980s, Trump took his racism to Atlantic City. This is Donald
Trump at his best. He cheated, coerced, filed bankruptcy, did anything
he could to cheat people out of money. In the process, his racism came
to the forefront in Atlantic City. Trump was accused of making his
African-American employees move off the casino floor when he didn't
want to see them, which was any time he came to the casino. One
employee, Kip Brown, said:
When Donald and Ivana came to the casino, the bosses would
order all the black people off the floor. It was the
eighties, I was a teenager, but I remember it: they put us
all in the back.
Trump was later fined $200,000 by the New Jersey Casino Control
Commission for that act of disgusting racism.
In the 1990s, John O'Donnell, the former president of Trump Plaza
Hotel and Casino, wrote a book about his time working with Donald
Trump. O'Donnell reported that Trump frequently denigrated African
Americans. He remembers a lot, but he specifically remembers Trump
saying of his accountants:
I've got black accountants at Trump Castle and Trump Plaza.
Black guys counting my money! I hate it. The only kind of
people I want counting my money are short guys that wear
yarmulkes every day.
How about that?
I've got black accountants at Trump Castle and Trump Plaza.
Black guys counting my money! I hate it.
Those are words from Donald Trump's mouth.
The only kind of people I want counting my money are short
guys that wear yarmulkes every day.
That is what he said.
Speaking of another African-American employee, Trump told O'Donnell:
I think the guy is lazy. And it's probably not his fault
because laziness is a trait in blacks. It really is. I
believe that.
[[Page S6074]]
That is Donald Trump. He thinks that Blacks are lazy and that they
can't help it because it is one of their traits. Trump didn't deny it.
He later admitted: ``The stuff O'Donnell wrote about me is probably
true.''
But since Donald Trump became involved in Presidential politics, his
racism has reached even new heights. Trump led the so-called birther
movement to delegitimize our first African-American President. Last
year, announcing his candidacy for President, Trump denounced Mexican
immigrants as ``criminals, drug dealers, rapists.''
Consider all of the despicable racist things he has done this year
alone. He has repeatedly called for a ban on Muslims entering the
United States. Trump attacked a Gold Star dad and a Gold Star mother.
They are Muslims. Their son, CPT Humayun Khan, was killed in battle,
but Donald Trump didn't only question Mr. Khan, he questioned Mrs.
Khan. She was sitting there, and he said: I guess she is not talking
because she is forbidden to speak by Islam.
Donald Trump refused to condemn former KKK grand wizard David Duke,
who is still in politics.
Donald Trump has retweeted messages from Nazi sympathizers and White
supremacists.
Donald Trump launched a racist attack on U.S. District Court Judge
Curiel, a man born in Indiana, but Trump didn't like that because his
mom and dad were of Mexican heritage. He said he should be disqualified
from hearing the case. Speaker Ryan called Trump's offensive attack ``a
textbook definition of a racist comment.'' This is the U.S. House of
Representatives Speaker, who acknowledges that his Republican
Presidential nominee is a racist. Yet here we are, 7 weeks from
election day, and the Speaker of the House and the Senate Republican
leader are both endorsing this racist man.
Republicans should not support a man for President who by their
Speaker's own admission is the textbook definition of a racist. Think
of the example Republicans are setting for our Nation's youth.
Republicans are normalizing this racist behavior. This will be their
legacy--one of them. They have plenty to add to that. Those who refuse
to denounce Donald Trump's actions as racism are complicit in
propagating and normalizing his hate.
It is time for reporters and journalists to be honest with the
American people. They owe Americans the truth: Through his words and
deeds, Donald Trump is a racist.
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