Possible 2020 presidential hopeful: Trump is doing ‘racist things’
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, considering a 2020 presidential run, said Thursday that President Donald Trump has done “plenty of racist things” to divide the nation while failing to deliver on health care reform and other promises.
In an interview with The Associated Press, the two-term Democratic mayor who already has visited the important presidential election states of Iowa and New Hampshire said he intends to make a decision on his candidacy by March.
To oust the president in a 2020 campaign, Garcetti said his party needs to show Trump doesn’t back up his words. He pointed to Trump’s promise to deliver a better health care plan than President Barack Obama’s model. “How’s that going?” he asked.
“We need to show this is not a strong man, this is a thin-skinned and ineffective person who isn’t saying everything wrong, he’s bringing up some good points, but he’s not producing anything,” Garcetti said. “And then the rest of the time he’s dividing us and trying to take things away from us.”
The mayor said that while “racism is something that lives in everybody,” Trump “seems to be much more comfortable with his racism, letting it out.”
“We do have a president, a commander in chief, who is using race to divide us. And not just race – immigration status, geography. He wants to divide us by these kind of essential categories, to point fingers,” Garcetti said.
He stopped short of calling Trump a racist but said “he certainly has done plenty of racist things.” Garcetti said it’s important for the public to know if Trump used the N-word as alleged by fired White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman.
In the wide-ranging interview, the mayor touched on issues from the city’s homelessness crisis to immigration. He did not join some other Democrats in calling for the abolition of Immigration and Customs Enforcement but said its mission must be changed.
“We have political leadership that has given ICE this mission that is destructive to families, to economies and to even the safety on our streets,” he said.
No candidate has ever ascended directly from a mayor’s office to the presidency, but Garcetti has argued that the work of mayors is essentially the type of chief executive work a president does. And in his case, he’s overseen a city that has a roughly trillion-dollar economy, behind only Tokyo and New York among world cities.
When asked about the characteristics a candidate would need to topple Trump in 2020, he appeared to describe himself in saying America needs someone not prone to theatrics and who listens more than speaks.
“President Trump is a great insulter. He’s a pretty practiced bully. But I think American people don’t want just somebody fighting with President Trump. They want somebody listening to them,” he said.
“Average American people are just looking to connect with someone they trust. I don’t think they trust Trump at the level that they did, even those who like him,” he said.
Garcetti added he “can fire it up too,” though he’s known for a polished, mannerly disposition.
Strongly Democratic California has been a mainstay in the so-called Trump resistance, but Garcetti said Trump’s tenure has amounted to more threats than any broad change in the way the city conducts business.
Should he run for president the expected crowded Democratic field could include fellow Californian Kamala Harris, a first-term U.S. senator and former state attorney general. Garcetti called her a dear friend and said what she does won’t influence his decision.
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AP Writer Michael Balsamo contributed to this report.
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