During his Fox News interview yesterday, Donald Trump was reminded that many U.S. military leaders believe it’s time to change the name of bases named after Confederate generals. “I don’t care what the military says,” the president said. “I’m supposed to make the decision.”
Moments later, the Republican added, “We’re going to name it after the Rev. Al Sharpton?”
In context, no one had brought up the MSNBC host and no one has suggested naming installations after Sharpton. Trump simply wanted to defend the practice of naming U.S. military bases after Confederates who took up arms against American troops. And to help bolster his case, the first name that came to the president’s mind as an example of someone who shouldn’t be honored was a prominent voice from the African-American community.
Soon after sitting down with Chris Wallace for the interview, Trump held a tele-rally with Wisconsin Republicans, where race remained on his mind.
On Friday evening, he told supporters in Wisconsin that Mr. Biden supported an Obama-era fair-housing rule. “They want to eliminate single-family zoning, bringing who knows into your suburbs, so your communities will be unsafe and your housing values will go down,” he said.
It’s about as subtle as a sledgehammer.
An Associated Press report noted over the weekend that fair-housing advocates are speaking up to describe Trump’s rhetoric as a “blatant attempt to play racial politics and appeal to white voters in the final weeks before the election.”
Diane Yentel, president of the National Low-Income Housing Coalition, told the AP, “He’s flatly saying that property values will go down and crime will increase if black people move into your neighborhoods. It’s especially abhorrent for Trump to be furthering racial entrenchment of segregated communities at this moment in our history.”
Circling back to our coverage from last week, it’s worth remembering that for much of Trump’s presidency, he barely mentioned American suburbs. There was a grand total of one tweet that referenced the suburbs in his first three years in office, and according to the Factbase database, the Republican’s presidential speeches also made little mention of suburban communities.
Now, however, Trump is suddenly preoccupied with suburbs and their pending doom. On Tuesday, for example, during a campaign event in the White House Rose Garden, the president said Democrats are “going to abolish the suburbs.”
On Thursday, he went a little further, insisting that Democrats “will totally destroy the beautiful suburbs…. People who have worked all their lives to get into a community and now they’re going to watch it go to hell.”
Naturally, Trump has echoed the sentiment with tweets.









