Logo

Logo

Trump tweets, then deletes video of supporter yelling ‘white power’

‘President Trump is a big fan of The Villages. He did not hear the one statement made on the video…What he did see was tremendous enthusiasm from his many supporters,’ White House spokesman Judd Deere said.

Trump tweets, then deletes video of supporter yelling ‘white power’

US President Donald Trump (File Photo: AFP)

As the presidential election in the United States are slated for November, Donald Trump on Sunday shared a video of a stand-off between anti-Trump protesters and his supporters in which a man chants “white power”  before deleting it amid an outcry.

“Thank you to the great people of The Villages,” Trump tweeted alongside the video clip. “The Radical Left Do Nothing Democrats will Fall in the Fall.”

The footage, apparently shot in a Florida retirement community, shows a man driving a golf-cart bearing “Trump 2020” and “America First” signs being heckled by a roadside protester chanting “racist.”

Advertisement

As they yell at each other, the driver repeatedly mouths the words “white power” with a raised fist.

“White power! There you go, white power. Did you hear that?” the protester yells back at him.

The phrase “white power” is considered synonymous with a call for white supremacy. The phrase has been espoused by neo-Nazis, skinheads and Ku Klux Klan members.

Trump tweeted the video shortly after 7:30 am and deleted it at around 11 am and the White House shortly after issued a statement saying the president had not heard the “white power” chant before sharing the footage.

“President Trump is a big fan of The Villages. He did not hear the one statement made on the video,” White House spokesman Judd Deere was quoted by news agency AFP as saying.

“What he did see was tremendous enthusiasm from his many supporters,” he added.

A wave of nationwide rallies calling for racial justice has swept the United States since the May 25 death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Trump has long been accused of fanning racial tensions in the country.

In 2017,  he infamously after deadly violence, pitted neo-Nazis against counter-protesters in the Virginia city of Charlottesville.  Trump declared there to be “very fine people on both sides.”

The “Villages” video triggered an immediate backlash.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden reacting on the incident took to Twitter and said , “Today the President shared a video of people shouting ‘white power’ and said they were ‘great.’ Just like he did after Charlottesville.”

“We’re in a battle for the soul of the nation — and the President has picked a side. But make no mistake: it’s a battle we will win.”

The Democratic National Committee said in a separate statement that “we need a president who will heal our nation’s wounds and unite the American people, not a demagogue who tries to divide us through fear and bigotry.”

Trump allies, meantime, were pressed to defend his tweet on the Sunday morning talk shows.

The Republican Party’s only black senator, Tim Scott, called the entire video “offensive” while being interviewed on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“We can play politics with it or we can’t. I’m not going to. I think it’s indefensible. We should take it down. That’s what I think.”

Also questioned on CNN, Trump’s Health Secretary Alex Azar claimed he had not seen the footage or Trump’s tweet.

“But obviously neither the president, his administration nor I would do anything to be supportive of white supremacy or anything that would support discrimination of any kind,” Azar said.

Earlier, Trump’s re-election campaign had said in a statement that Biden has “had to adopt most of Bernie’s agenda” — policies that Trump has branded socialist.

In a series of polls conducted in April, Biden leads Trump in head-to-head general election matchups by an average of 5.9 percent.

The 2020 US presidential election is scheduled for Tuesday, November 3.

Advertisement