In the wake of Donald Trump’s recent racist criticisms of four Democratic congresswomen, there’s been considerable discussion about the president and his antagonistic relationship with minority communities and people of color.
And it appears that conversation has bothered a white Republican congressman from Pennsylvania — for a curious reason.
U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Butler, is defending comments he made to a reporter Tuesday, in the wake of President Donald Trump’s tweets telling four congresswomen of color to “go back” to where they came from.
“You know, they talk about people of color. I’m a person of color. I’m white,” Kelly told Daniel Newhauser of Vice News. “I’m an Anglo-Saxon. People say things all the time, but I don’t get offended. With a name like Mike Kelly you can’t be from any place else but Ireland.”
As the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review‘s article added, the GOP congressman believes the excerpt from his Vice News interview “mischaracterized our conversation and my broader point: We’re all created equal. It’s time to stop fixating on our differences and focus on what unites us.”
Perhaps, though that doesn’t change the fact that a white Republican congressman described himself — on the record and on tape — as a “person of color.”
As a general rule, no one defines “person of color” this way, and no one should.









