Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson has weighed in on the public feud between President Donald Trump and several “progressive” Democratic congresswomen, saying that he did not think the president is racist.
“But he loves the country very much and, you know, he has a feeling that those who represent the country should love it as well,” he added.
He unloaded his accusations against the freshman congresswomen in a series of Twitter posts between July 14 and 16. His most notable post was one where he called on “‘progressive’ Democrat Congresswomen” to “go back” to their countries to help fix the “totally broken and crime-infested places” before returning to the United States to “show us how it is done.” Apart from Omar, who was born in Somalia, the other three lawmakers were born in the United States.
Many of Trump’s opponents denounced the comments, calling them racist. The four congresswomen also held a press conference on July 15 to publicly fight back against the president.
The Democrat-controlled House even passed a resolution to condemn the president’s remarks on July 16 largely on party lines.
Carson told the program’s hosts that Trump’s record in lifting minorities out of poverty and unemployment demonstrates whether the president is racist or not.
“Look at his policies, you know, under this president you see the rising tide lifting all boats. You see low unemployment ... record-low for blacks, for Hispanics ... for all the demographics of our nation,” Carson said.
He then went on to give an example of the administration’s support for “opportunity zones.”
“Just a couple of weeks ago, the president signed an executive order establishing a council on eliminating the barriers to affordable housing. Who’s going to benefit from that? So when you have somebody who’s spending this much time and this much effort, trying to elevate those who are vulnerable and who are suffering in our society—I think we should pay a lot more attention to what they are doing than what anybody is saying,” Carson said.
“I’m not saying America doesn’t have certain problems. Go see the conditions around the world. And you will be so fortunate you live here. We are blessed to live in this country. And if you’re not happy about it. I like his message. Leave,” he added.
The president’s son said Democrats resort to “name-calling” because “they have no message.”
“This is what’s happening to the party and it’s totally feeding into our hand. I hope they keep on doing it because they’re not getting anything done … if anybody thinks differently than them, if anybody looks different than them, if anybody acts different, if anybody has different beliefs or thoughts, they have no message, so what are they going to do? You’re a racist, you’re a this, you’re a that,” Trump said.
The Reuters-Ipsos public opinion poll, conducted on July 15 and 16, showed that Trump’s net approval among members of the Republican Party rose by 5 percentage points to 72 percent, compared with a similar poll that ran last week.
The poll also found that the president lost support with Democrats and independents since the tweetstorm on July 14.
About 3 out of 10 independents said they approved of Trump, down from 4 out of 10 a week ago. His net approval—the percentage who approve minus the percentage who disapprove—fell by 2 points among Democrats in the poll.