Around this time yesterday morning, Donald Trump published a tweet announcing that he was on his way to the Supreme Court to pay his respects to the late Justice John Paul Stevens. Just 16 minutes later, while en route, the president returned to the issue that was actually on his mind.
Renewing his offensive against Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), Trump tweeted that the congresswomen of color are “a very Racist group of troublemakers who are young, inexperienced, and not very smart.”
Part of what made this notable was its familiarity: those credibly accused of racism routinely try to argue that its their detractors who are the “real” racists. As a Washington Post analysis explained yesterday:
Trump is claiming that allegations of racism directed at himself and his policies — and the supporters who embrace them — are themselves examples of racism. Analysis by The Washington Post found that Trump is three times as likely to accuse nonwhite people of racism as he is white people.
This isn’t a new phenomenon. When segregationist Alabama Gov. George Wallace was asked if he considered himself to be a racist during a 1968 interview, he offered a similar deflection.
“No sir, I don’t regard myself as a racist,” Wallace said, “and I think the biggest racists in the world are those who call other folks racist. I think the biggest bigots in the world are those who call other folks bigots.”
And since so much of the president’s far-right base is convinced that “reverse racism” from minority communities is a societal scourge, it’s likely Trump is accusing his critics of being “very racist” at least in part because he expects his followers to agree.
But just as notable is Trump’s go-to defense mechanisms. Let’s call it the president’s “no-puppeting” problem.
As we discussed a few months ago, Trump has an inordinate fondness for projection: he identifies his faults, and then reflexively projects those faults onto his perceived foes.
When Democrats accused the president of variety of crimes, Trump insisted the “real crimes were committed” by Democrats. When Dems argued the president obstructed justice, Trump replied that it’s the Dems who have obstructed justice.
Confronted with allegations that his political operation colluded with Russian attackers, Trump said Democrats colluded with Russia. Told that the Kremlin supported his candidacy, Trump responded by saying Russia supported Democrats. Accused of being a manipulated pawn for Vladimir Putin, Trump accused Barack Obama of being Putin’s “patsy.”









