In his press conference on Monday, a reporter asked Donald Trump what he would do with the DREAM kids, those undocumented young people who were brought to the U.S. as children. You’ll recall that in the wake of the failure of the DREAM act in the congress, President Obama issued a policy in 2012 allowing them to apply for a deferral of deportation, assuming they met certain criteria. In the past, Trump has insisted they would “have to go” along with their parents. In fact, he’s said that the American children of undocumented workers would be deported as well.
When asked about it in the press conference, he oddly said DREAMers were “great” and then launched into a speech which clearly gave the opposite impression:
You know what I want? I want dreamers to come from this country, ok? You mention dreamers, excuse me, you mention dreamers. I want dreamers to come from the United States. The people in the United States that have children I want them to have dreams also. We’re always talking about dreams for other people, I want the children who are growing up in the United States to dream also and they’re not dreaming right now.
Fair enough. But then he switched gears:
You look at African American youth, I mean 58% unemployment. You look at African Americans and they’re 30 years old an 40 years old and you have an African American president and he has not done anything for African Americans in this country, ok? And he got a free pass. Because if that were me or someone else, we would be taken over the coals.
Trump is known for exaggerating the unemployment rate, so the figure of 58 percent unemployment is wrong. Obviously. African American youth unemployment is too high, absolutely. But as Jonathan Capehart reported in the Washington Post last month, it’s actually lower right now than it’s been in years. In December 2015, black people aged 16-24 had a 17.6 percent rate of unemployment, down from the all time high of 34 percent during the worst of the Great Recession in 2011.
But the point he seemed to be making was something else: that the president had put the well-being of Latino immigrant youth before that of African Americans and that if it were anyone but Barack Obama, African Americans would be angry about it. That’s a typical right-wing whine, unsurprising coming a man who claims he will be better for African Americans than the first black president — and he’ll do it by punishing all those Latinos that president allegedly prefers.
For the most part, there has not been a history of antagonism between Latinos and blacks as regards immigration. There have been some prominent African American politicians of the past, like the late Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, who believed that immigration brought down wages which helped keep African Americans in poverty. This is currently being exploited by anti-immigrant groups using her words in advertisements to make the case for closing the borders.
But most economists do not believe that wages are suppressed by undocumented workers, and institutions which used to be hostile to immigration, like unions, have changed their position on the issue. In fact, the immigration debate is much more focused these days on culture, citizenship, “welfare” and the abstract notion of sovereignty than on wages. African American leaders are squarely with the Democratic mainstream position in favor of comprehensive immigration reform.
Pitting Latinos against African Americans remains a tactic on the anti-immigrant far right, however, where nativist groups like VDARE fatuously declare their deep concern for the well-being of African Americans while running articles like this onefrom John Derbyshire, in which he complains about Beyoncé’s “anti-white thunder thighs.” Their insincerity toward the problems of the African American community couldn’t be any clearer.
No one can say that Donald Trump is not very tuned in to the anti-immigration right. And these comments juxtaposing the DREAMers and African Americans did not happen in a vacuum. As a matter of fact, Trump has released a new ad that comes at this theme from another angle:
Breitbart News wrote about the ad when it was first released explaining that Trump is trying to attract African American votes in South Carolina. And according to Buzzfeed, Trump and some of his racist friends actually think they have a chance to woo African American voters with this appeal: