It is very clear that all Republicans, but especially President Donald Trump, are growing increasingly desperate as the midterm elections grow near.
While they had initially planned to base their November campaigns on the great economy and the wonderful benefits of their tax plan, they have discovered that those ideas aren’t working.
Most American voters know that neither the economy nor the tax plan benefit them, but instead benefit big corporations and the super-rich.
This has left Republican candidates grasping at straws to find issues and messages that resonate with swing voters. And what they are left with is their main fallback issue: racism.
The GOP has met with great success when they use racism, bigotry and fear to motivate voters. Because of this they have been able to sell average Americans on their programs which actually hurt average Americans economically.
The most recent example of this is the great danger (according to Trump) that Americans are facing from the “army” of migrants who have left Central America in a caravan, heading to invade the United States. If you listen to Trump and others on the right-wing you’d think that a few thousand poor refugees were threatening the very safety of the United States, with its 325 million people and a $20 trillion economy.
Trump has been tweeting about the dangers of the caravan almost nonstop. And he has been blaming Democrats for everything, and saying they need to pass new immigration laws. Of course he is ignoring the fact that the entire federal government — and two-thirds of state governments — are controlled by Republicans.
One tweet this morning illustrates Trump’s approach, and shows that he thinks race-based fear will help the GOP in this year’s elections:
“Every time you see a Caravan, or people illegally coming, or attempting to come, into our Country illegally, think of and blame the Democrats for not giving us the votes to change our pathetic Immigration Laws! Remember the Midterms! So unfair to those who come in legally.”
Trump’s desperate ploys probably won’t salvage the midterms for the GOP, although his appeals to racism and fear have worked before.
In an opinion piece for The Hill, Juan Williams outlined other examples of Republican candidates basing their campaign messages on racism. In a piece entitled “GOP plays the bigotry card in midterms” Williams gave the following examples:
Williams closes his piece by making a disturbing observation:
“With just over two weeks to go, we are now getting a clear picture of what the GOP’s closing argument will be to voters in the 2018 Midterms. It will be anti-immigrant bigotry. This is the frightening, ghoulish state of American politics in October 2018.”
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