In August 2017, after deadly violence broke out on the streets of Charlottesville, Donald Trump publicly defended the “very fine people” among the racist activists. The Republican president also expressed his deep affection for monuments honoring Confederate leaders who took up arms against the United States during the Civil War.
It was against this backdrop that Ronna McDaniel, the chair of the Republican National Committee, traveled to Detroit for … wait for it … an outreach event for African-American voters, encouraging the community to support Republican candidates.
As the Detroit News reported at the time, “The timing couldn’t have been more awkward.”
Nearly two years later, a similar dynamic is unfolding.
Vice President Pence is traveling to Florida on Tuesday to launch a national “Latinos for Trump” initiative in a bid to bolster support for the Republican ticket at time when new polling shows large majorities of Hispanics favoring the election of a Democrat next year.
Pence is scheduled to appear later Tuesday morning in Miami, the city that is hosting the first of the Democratic presidential debates this week. Florida, home to more than 2 million Hispanic registered voters, is a key state for Trump’s reelection fortunes next year.
To borrow the Detroit News‘ phrasing, the timing couldn’t be more awkward.
Indeed, the far-right vice president will be in south Florida to make his pitch to Latino voters the week after Trump promised to dispatch federal agents to “begin the process of removing … millions of illegal aliens.” The president later put that plan on hold, for two weeks, and he said he agreed to the delay “at the request of Democrats.”









