Yahoo – AFP,
Jerome CARTILLIER, August 16, 2017
New York (AFP) - Donald Trump found himself in the eye of a political storm Wednesday after his stunning remarks on the unrest in Charlottesville, which sparked unease within his own camp and could mark a turning point in his already chaotic presidency.
![]() |
| US President Donald Trump's defiant and caustic statements about Charlottesville on Tuesday left many lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats alike, speechless (AFP Photo/JIM WATSON) |
New York (AFP) - Donald Trump found himself in the eye of a political storm Wednesday after his stunning remarks on the unrest in Charlottesville, which sparked unease within his own camp and could mark a turning point in his already chaotic presidency.
His
assessment that there was "blame on both sides" for the deadly melee
sparked a rare comment on current affairs from his two Republican predecessors,
George Bush and George W. Bush, who called on Americans to "reject racial
bigotry... in all its forms."
The violent
fracas in the Virginia college town began Saturday when a rally by white
supremacists over the removal of a Confederate statue turned violent, as they
clashed with counter-protesters.
It ended in
tragedy when a 20-year-old suspected Nazi sympathizer, James Fields, plowed his
car into a crowd of anti-racism protesters, leaving one woman dead and 19
others injured.
Trump's defiant
statements on Tuesday, delivered in a caustic way at Trump Tower and
immediately hailed by a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan for their
"courage," left many lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats alike,
speechless.
The
Republican billionaire seemed to have crossed a red line with his statements,
just over 200 days into his presidency.
Many
observers were left with the impression that the unscripted Trump of Tuesday
was the real Trump -- rather than the man who delivered a more measured
statement from the White House on Monday in which he firmly denounced
"racist violence."
![]() |
Protesters
have marched outside Trump Tower since the president returned to
his New York
home earlier this week (AFP Photo/Eduardo MUNOZ ALVAREZ)
|
'He has
to fix this'
In a clear
sign of embarrassment, Republican lawmakers did not line up to defend the real
estate mogul-turned-president, as they have repeatedly done since he took
office in January. Those who did speak criticized him.
"In
Charlottesville, the blame lays squarely on the KKK and white
supremacists," the leader of the Republican National Committee, Ronna
Romney McDaniel, told ABC News.
Senator
Lindsey Graham, a regular Trump critic, said many Republicans would "fight
back against the idea that the party of Lincoln has a welcome mat out for the
David Dukes of the world."
"He
has to fix this and Republicans have to speak out. Plain and simple," Ohio
governor John Kasich, who battled Trump for the Republican presidential
nomination last year, told NBC's "Today" show.
David
Axelrod, a former top aide to Barack Obama, said: "Why are we surprised
that a @POTUS, who began his campaign with appeals to bigotry, would give
comfort to bigots?"
Trump's
remarks -- made at an impromptu press conference that was expected to focus on
infrastructure reforms -- put the white supremacists and counter-demonstrators
on equal moral ground.
"I
think there is blame on both sides," Trump said, as his new chief of
staff, former Marine general John Kelly, stood rigidly near him and looked
uncomfortable.
"You
had a group on one side that was bad, and you had a group on the other side
that was also very violent. And nobody wants to say that, but I'll say it right
now," Trump continued.
"What
about the alt-left that came charging... at the, as you say, the alt-right? Do
they have any semblance of guilt? (...) There are two sides to a story."
He also
said there were "very fine people, on both sides."
His remarks
had led several top business executives to resign from White House advisory
panels. On Wednesday, Trump simply dissolved the forums.
![]() |
Map of the
US state of Virginia locating Charlottesville, where hundreds of
white
supremacists held a rally on Saturday that deteriorated into violence
(AFP
Photo/AFP)
|
"Rather
than putting pressure on the businesspeople of the Manufacturing Council &
Strategy & Policy Forum, I am ending both. Thank you all!" he tweeted.
Obama
tweet makes history
Trump had
suffered a first wave of indignation immediately after Saturday's events, when
critics said his comments were too vague and did not go far enough to denounce
neo-Nazis and KKK members at the Charlottesville rally.
Obama, his
predecessor, had reacted by tweeting a quote from Nelson Mandela: "No one
is born hating another person because of the color of his skin or his
background or his religion."
The tweet
is now the most "liked" ever sent on the social network, Twitter said
Wednesday.
In an
editorial, The New York Times said Trump's behavior "has become
distressingly unsurprising."
"Washington
politicians had hoped the recent appointment of John Kelly, a retired Marine
general, as his chief of staff would instill some discipline in his chaotic
administration," the paper said.
"But
the root of the problem is not the personnel; it is the man at the top."
In St
Louis, where he was mounting a competitive comeback, even chess legend Garry
Kasparov weighed in, saying: "My family & I were forced out of one
home by ethnic violence and another by political persecution. America
must both fight hate & stay free."
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Trump says US culture, history being 'ripped apart' https://t.co/QmsiqC7Bcj pic.twitter.com/MsecmPGmko— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 17, 2017
The honeymoon is definitely over. #Trump, the businessman president, begins to lose CEO support https://t.co/FTPMIleNsE pic.twitter.com/ltEc7aMdBc— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 16, 2017
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