I Don't Have a Racist Bone in My Body-Trump
US President
Donald Trump has insisted he is not a racist after his Twitter attacks on four
US congresswomen were widely condemned as racist.
Mr Trump had
suggested the four women - all US citizens - "can leave" the US.
Responding
to the criticism, Mr Trump tweeted: "Those Tweets were NOT Racist. I don't
have a Racist bone in my body!"
His remarks
came as the US House of Representatives prepared to vote on a symbolic
resolution condemning his previous comments.
The measure
- which would have no force of law - is expected to pass because Democrats have
a majority in the House, with any Republican support likely to enhance its
censure.
Earlier,
Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar, Ayanna Pressley and
Rashida Tlaib - the targets of Mr Trump's attack - dismissed his remarks as a
distraction.
They urged
the US people "not to take the bait" at a news conference on Monday.
The
president did not explicitly name the women in his initial Twitter tirade on
Sunday, but the context made a clear link to the four Democratic congresswomen,
who are known as The Squad.
He sparked a
furore after saying the women "originally came from countries whose
governments are a complete and total catastrophe" and they should go home.
Three of the
women were born in the US and one, Ms Omar, was born in Somalia but came to the
US as a child.
Following
the outcry, the four women told reporters they wanted to re-focus attention on
to the president's policies.
"This
is simply a disruption and a distraction from the callous chaos and corrupt
culture of this administration, all the way down," Ms Pressley said.
Both Ms Omar
and Ms Tlaib repeated their calls for Mr Trump to be impeached.
On Tuesday,
Mr Trump kept up his attack on the women, accusing them of saying "filthy
and hate-laced things".
Ms Pressley
dismissed the president's efforts "to marginalise us and to silence
us".
She added:
"Our squad includes any person committed to building a more equitable and
just world."
All four
women insisted that healthcare, gun violence and, in particular, detentions of
migrants on the US border with Mexico should be in focus.
"The
eyes of history are watching us," said Ms Omar said, decrying the
"mass deportation raids" and "human rights abuses at the
border".
Ms Omar says
Mr Trump's "blatantly racist attack" on four women of colour was
"the agenda of white nationalists", adding that the president would
like "nothing more than to divide our country".
Ms Tlaib
called it "simply a continuation of his racist, xenophobic playbook".
"We
remain focused on holding him accountable to the laws of this land," she
said.
President
Trump doubled down at the White House, verbally attacking these congresswomen
of colour, and he tripled down on Twitter later on.
He is using
language that is well outside of the usual parameters of presidential
discourse.
The fact
that he is escalating the issue shows he seems to be enjoying it and, for him,
it serves a political purpose. He sees it as revving up the base.
However, he
risks alienating the moderate Republicans - some of whom already failed to back
him in last year's mid-term elections.
On Friday,
Ms Ocasio-Cortez, Ms Tlaib and Ms Pressley testified to a House committee about
conditions in a migrant detention centre they had visited.
Democrats
have widely criticised the Trump administration's approach to border control,
saying they are holding migrants in inhumane conditions.
Mr Trump
insists the border is facing a crisis and has defended the actions of his border
agents. His administration announced a new rule to take effect on 16 July,
which denies asylum to anyone who crosses the southern border without having
applied for protection in "at least one third country" on their way
to the US.
After their
testimony, Mr Trump said conditions at the centre had had "great
reviews". He then posted his series of tweets about the women and Ms Omar,
attacks he redoubled on Monday.
Democrats
have roundly condemned the president, and many were quick to say it was a
racist attack.
However, top
Republicans have been less outspoken. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
said he would answer questions on Tuesday.
Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin said: "I don't find them racist, the president
just went on and clarified his comments." He then changed the subject.
Some,
including Senator Lindsey Graham, turned the topic back on to the politics of
the four women, who are seen to be progressive. He told Fox News they are
communists and anti-America.
US Senator
and former presidential candidate Mitt Romney called Mr Trump's remarks
"destructive, demeaning, and disunifying". But when a reporter asked
him if they were racist, he walked away.
Lower-ranking
members of the Republican Party were, however, more direct.
Tim Scott,
the only African-American Republican in the Senate, called the president's
words "racially offensive". Republican Congressman Will Hurd, who is
also African American, described the comments as "racist and
xenophobic".
Democratic
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has, meanwhile, announced a resolution in the House
to condemn the attack. She has urged Republicans to back it.
Her
colleague Chuck Schumer said he would introduce a similar motion in the Senate.
"We'll see how many Republicans sign on," he tweeted.
The leaders
of several US allies have come out against the president.
New
Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she "completely and
utterly" disagreed with Mr Trump, while Canada's Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau similarly denounced the comments.
"That
is not how we do things in Canada. A Canadian is a Canadian is a
Canadian," he said at a press conference.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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