Taping into the the playbooks of Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, GOP resorts to racist 'dog whistle' in crime based political ads. Apocalyptic images of blazing buildings and
window-smashing protesters pop on the TV screen as a caller to a 911 emergency
line reaches voicemail. The computer offers to take reports of rapes, murders
or home invasions, adding, “Our estimated wait time is five days.”
The 30-second ad by President Donald
Trump’s reelection campaign ends with “You won’t be safe in Joe
Biden’s America” emblazoned across a flickering hellscape. It blames a push by
progressive activists to defund the police as “violent crime has
exploded,reported The Associated Press.
With recent shootings that have killed children and
dozens of others in cities with large Black populations like New York, Atlanta
and Chicago, the GOP is trying to play offense, ominously. Ads like Trump’s and
other Republican messaging insinuate that the rare looting and violence that
marred largely peaceful social justice protests are spreading and foretell a
wave of mayhem that they claim Democrats would abet with anti-police policies.
Trump emphasized that menacing theme at the White
House Thursday, calling proponents of defunding the police “crazy.” Telling a
visiting group of Hispanic Americans that many immigrants had fled dangerous
countries, Trump added, “They know what happens when the police cannot protect
the innocent, when the rule of law is destroyed.”
Democrats call the GOP drive an obvious diversion from
issues they say voters care most about: the coronavirus
pandemic that Trump has failed to control, the economic shutdown,
recession-level unemployment, racial justice and health care.
They say Biden, the party’s presumptive presidential
nominee, has a well-honed moderate record that makes Republican efforts to cast
him as a radical fruitless. And they say the GOP is fanning the flames of
racism, preying on white suburbanites worried that televised scenes of burning
buildings mean their neighborhoods are next.
“It’s not even subtle. We’re well beyond dog whistle,”
said Ian Russell, a Democratic consultant.
The GOP spearhead comes with polls showing that
Trump’s reelection and Republican control of the Senate may be in jeopardy in
November’s voting. It also follows weeks of protests following the killing
of George
Floyd by Minneapolis police and during a period that’s seen Trump call
the phrase “Black
Lives Matter” a “symbol of hate,” defend Confederate commanders and
retweet a supporter yelling, ”White power!”
Biden supports overhauling police practices and
budgets but has repeatedly disavowed calls for defunding the police, as have
most congressional Democrats. Republicans often suggest the term means that
proponents want to abolish entire departments — and some far-left Democrats do
— but most in the party consider it a call to shift some police resources to
social welfare and other agencies.
Biden aides say it’s a fantasy to cast the former vice
president as seeking to dismantle police departments or ready to heed those who
would. “Donald Trump is a chronic liar” who is “desperate to run against a
fictitious opponent instead of Joe Biden,” said Biden spokesperson Andrew
Bates.
Trump campaign spokesperson Tim Murtaugh called it
“ridiculous” for Democrats to say the GOP tactic is racist.
“All Americans, no matter who they are or where they
live, should be concerned about the anarchists and lawless mobs roaming the
streets with the tacit approval of Joe Biden and the Democrats,” Murtaugh said.
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