The fact that Donald Trump hopes to use his office to generate public fear of immigrants is obvious. What the political world needs to come to terms with is just how far the president is prepared to go in pursuit of this goal.
We talked several months ago, for example, about the Trump administration’s Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) office, which includes a hotline Americans can call if they’re a victim of a specific kind of crime: those perpetrated by undocumented immigrants. The fact that the VOICE initiative has proven to be ridiculous hasn’t discouraged the White House.
On the contrary, in February, the White House distributed to reporters a “round-up” of “immigration crime stories,” purporting to show — in some cases, falsely — evidence of immigrants breaking the law.
Late last week, Trump took his campaign, which has genuinely scary antecedents, a little further.
President Donald Trump ended a week of criticism of his administration’s now-reversed policy of separating migrant children from their parents at the U.S. border Friday with another event highlighting the stories of Americans whose family members had been killed by undocumented immigrants.
The president blasted the news media, Democrats and other critics at the event, accusing them of ignoring the plight of “the American victims of illegal immigration,” while the victims’ families, called Angel Families, stood behind him holding poster-sized photos of their deceased relative.
At face value, the event was difficult to defend. As far as this president is concerned, victims of crimes deserve our sympathy, but victims of crimes committed by immigrants deserve special attention, a special White House event, and a special name.
The point is to generate fear of immigrants in the hopes of advancing the president’s crusade. There is no other reason to exploit these families’ grief.
But making matters worse was the degree to which Trump found it necessary to lie during the event.









