On Friday, Trump posted a video that depicted former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama as apes. The post and Trump’s attempt to cover up his responsibility make clear that the president is a racist liar. It is the most despicable statement by a US president ever (except possibly for other racist and sexist statements by Trump). The only point of this story that matters is that Trump posted a racist video and then lied about his involvement. But the political backlash against Trump from his own party has been fierce. The combination of mob-style threats and Republican cowardice is no longer strong enough to enforce silence and obedience among members of the Republican Party. Multiple members of the GOP condemned Trump’s post as racist. And then he lied about the circumstances of its posting—blaming an unnamed staffer who will never be named or fired, because he or she does not exist. See HuffPost, Republicans Condemn ‘Incredibly Offensive’ Trump Post About The Obamas. Trump’s evolving denials are fooling no one. Trump’s claim that an unnamed staff member posted the video to Trump’s personal social media account at 11:44 p.m. on Thursday evening is not believable. Trump claimed, “We took it down as soon as we found out about it.” Another lie. The video remained online for twelve hours—long after there was a firestorm of condemnation directed toward Trump. Indeed, Karoline Leavitt defended the video at 8:06 a.m. on Friday—something she would not have done without first clearing her statement with Trump. The video remained online for another four hours after Leavitt defended it. See Yahoo News, “Trump’s post of the video was deleted, about noon Eastern Time on Feb. 6, 2026.” Karoline Leavitt dismissed the outcry over the racist post as “fake outrage.”
If the outrage was “fake,” Republicans were at the forefront of the fake outrage. South Carolina GOP Sen. Tim Scott was one of the first Republicans to condemn Trump, writing, “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House.” See The Hill, GOP breaks with Trump White House on Obama post as Tim Scott opens the floodgates. Per The Hill,
Per The Hill, Mark Burns, a pastor with ties to Trump, urged him to apologize. Trump demurred, claiming that the post was the work of an unnamed staff person. But Pastor Burns wasn’t buying what Trump was peddling. Burns said,
No staffer has been (or will ever be) identified. In the same breath that Trump claims a staffer was to blame, Trump said, “I did not make a mistake.” See AL.com, Trump says he did not make a mistake with racist, deleted Obama ape meme. Ultimately, Trump said, “Of course I do” when asked if he condemned the video. So much for the “fake outrage” mocked by Karoline Leavitt in her initial response. See CNBC, Trump condemns racist video showing Obamas as apes after removing it. Trump’s forced condemnation of the video is just that—forced. There is no contrition, only regret at having been caught. In the past few weeks, the White House has posted racist videos that mocked Hakeem Jeffries and a protester being arrested by ICE. Finally, few outlets are noting the hypocrisy of Trump’s claim that a staffer posted the video without his knowledge. The claim that an anonymous staffer did it asks us to believe that Trump is not really running his presidency. Where is Jake Tapper when Trump is asserting dementia as an affirmative defense to racism? The vile racist attack on the Obamas was not an aberration. It fits the pattern of Trump’s attack on DEI and purge of dozens of Black leaders within the administration. See this powerful essay in What Trump Did Today (Substack), When the Hood Comes Off.
Trump’s vile racist outburst wasn’t an aberration. It was a continuation of racial animus that has been the guiding principle of his administration. Concluding Thoughts.It is shocking that Trump has convinced the Republican Party to (publicly) embrace racism as one of its bedrock principles. But something in his attack on President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama touched a nerve in the American people. The Obamas are dignified and graceful, generous public servants who gave their lives to the American people. Their very existence is a rebuke to the ugliness that is Trump’s narcissistic, grievance-fueled relationship with the world. But even on a day marred by Trump’s racist attack on the Obamas, we can find hope in the hesitant, long-overdue voices of criticism speaking out against Trump from within his party. If Republican elected officials with much to lose are willing to condemn Trump, imagine what rank-and-file Republicans are thinking about their president. So, too, with persuadable independents and disaffected Democrats who stayed home in 2024. Trump has crossed another line of decency, humanity, and civility. He is not us—at least not most of us. And in that fact lies our national salvation. |