Trump's familiar cycle of hate

Here's why Trump is always slow to disavow neo-Nazis

President Trump makes a statement on the Charlottesville protests.
(Image credit: AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

This past weekend I couldn't help but think of the speech Hillary Clinton gave last August in which she went after Donald Trump's connections to the alt-right. "Of course there's always been a paranoid fringe in our politics, steeped in racial resentment," she said. "But it's never had the nominee of a major party stoking it, encouraging it, and giving it a national megaphone. Until now." The speech wasn't particularly well-received, and most of the discussion of its content focused on whether it might persuade Trump's avid supporters to desert him — which of course they didn't. The Trump campaign knew that, and wasn't worried. As Stephen Bannon told reporter Joshua Green at the time, "We polled the race stuff and it doesn't matter. It doesn't move anyone who isn't already in her camp."

So Trump felt little need to distance himself from the collection of white nationalists, white supremacists, and outright Nazis who were so thrilled by his candidacy. And in the wake of the terrorist attack in Charlottesville, we saw a repetition of a now-familiar cycle. First, there's an incident or flare-up of right-wing hate, seemingly inspired by Trump. His response is to ignore it, dismiss it, or give it tacit support. Criticism — beginning on the left but spreading even to some within his own party — then gets louder and louder. Finally, with the controversy not going away, Trump makes a statement, usually written by others and read with all the sincerity of a hostage video, in which he expresses what ought to be the baseline values of any human being with a shred of morality.

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Paul Waldman

Paul Waldman is a senior writer with The American Prospect magazine and a blogger for The Washington Post. His writing has appeared in dozens of newspapers, magazines, and web sites, and he is the author or co-author of four books on media and politics.