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Trump plays politics with Chicago crime, a game only criminals win

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

In this summer of many discontents, my biggest frustration is the way every major crisis seems to open up another culture war.

It wouldn’t be so annoying if we also saw some movement toward compromise and even agreement, but culture wars don’t work that way.

We saw an example Thursday when White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany ended her Thursday news briefing by invoking the names of eight young children, six of whom died from the gun violence that has surged again in Chicago this summer.

The children are “close to our hearts,” she said, as the faces of Natalia Wallace, 7, Mekhi James, 3, Vernado Jones Jr., 14, Sincere Gaston, 20 months, Lena Marie Nunez, 10, and Amaria Jones, 13, were shown on a screen.

I winced. Although I am pleased to see attention drawn to such obviously innocent victims — all of whom were Black — after years of seeing them buried in the back pages of most minds, I am also tired — exceedingly tired — of seeing various politicians and pundits hold up Chicago’s gun violence, not so much to help resolve the crisis as to use it as a bullhorn to shame their adversaries.

Chicago is not alone in receiving this president’s wrath. Three days earlier, McEnany scolded reporters for asking a series of questions about a tweet the president sent about NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, but not one question about violence that had taken the lives of children in New York and Atlanta, among other cities. Then she quickly left the stage without taking further questions.

 

Criticism of crime in Chicago, the adopted hometown of his predecessor Barack Obama, is a tune that Trump has been playing since his candidate days. I, for one, am still waiting for him to reveal the plan that he used to claim repeatedly had been revealed to him by an unnamed high-ranking Chicago police officer to solve Chicago’s violent crime problem “immediately.”

Still waiting.

McEnany made clear which side she and the president for whom she speaks were on when she chastised the “growing criticism of America’s police” and cited a Rasmussen poll from June. It found 64% of Americans are concerned that the growing criticism of America’s police will lead to a shortage of police officers and reduce public safety in the community where they live.

Of that number, she also noted, 67% of Black Americans are worried about public safety in their neighborhoods, which was a few points higher than whites and other minority groups.

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(c) 2020 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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