As racist and sexist attacks fly, Republicans grapple with how to take
on Harris
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[July 27, 2024]
By Helen Coster, Alexandra Ulmer and David Morgan
(Reuters) - Republican nominee Donald Trump has called her "crazy,"
"nuts" and "dumb as a rock." Republicans in Congress disparage her as a
diversity hire. Right-wing activists and trolls have smeared her online
with racist, sexist and sexualized barbs.
The attacks on Kamala Harris, the first woman and first Black and South
Asian person to serve as U.S. vice president, have intensified in the
days since she consolidated support to become Democrats' likely
presidential nominee.
The demeaning racist and sexist attacks threaten to distract from the
Republican Party's concerted effort to focus on Harris' policies. Trump
allies, including some members of the "Black Americans for Trump"
coalition, warn that disparaging Harris could hurt him in his outreach
to Black voters, a crucial demographic in the Nov. 5 presidential
election.
In interviews with nine Republican lawmakers and 11 Black Republican
women who back Trump, eight said personal attacks on Harris should be
avoided. While guarded in their comments and emphasizing their continued
support for Trump, several expressed worry over the tenor of the attacks
and whether the onslaught could harm Republicans at the ballot box.
"I think there is a way to critique her without going underneath her
clothes," said P Rae Easley, a Black conservative radio show host in
Chicago and a member of the "Black Americans for Trump" coalition, a
loosely organized group of Black allies backing Trump.
Several members of Congress echoed her sentiments.
"I'm going to oppose Vice President Harris because of what she's done,
not who she is," said Representative Dusty Johnson, who chairs the
75-member Republican Main Street Caucus. "Some of this ugliness is
unbecoming of a great country."
Others said the attacks on Harris' personal life were no different than
Democrats attacking Trump over his personal and family life.
"It's a nasty fight. Democrats have a tendency to play victim," said
Madgie Nicolas, co-chair of Haitians for Trump and the Faith and Freedom
Coalition's national director of African American voices.
The tension suggests Trump campaign efforts to tie Harris to President
Joe Biden's record – particularly on immigration, crime and the economy
– risk being overshadowed by personal attacks that show no signs of
slowing.
"Going after Kamala Harris as a 'DEI hire' is breathtakingly stupid,"
said Republican pollster Whit Ayres, who has worked on campaigns for
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and others.
"It's going to backfire," Ayres said, adding that Harris had an
"incredible array of far left-wing policies" that could be targeted.
DEI stands for "diversity, equity and inclusion" initiatives aimed at
increasing representation of women and people of color in the workforce
to address longstanding inequities and discrimination. The term "DEI
hire" is now used to suggest a person is not qualified for their role
and has been chosen on the basis of their race or gender.
Ayres said the disparaging rhetoric would alienate women and "anyone who
isn't far-right."
The Trump campaign did not directly respond to questions about whether
it had discussed trying to tone down personal attacks on Harris.
Trump's inflammatory rhetoric has emboldened people with racist beliefs
to express them, according to rhetoric experts, critics and past public
opinion polling.
The former president has a history of attacking political opponents,
including other Black women in power such as Fulton County District
Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecuting his election interference case
in Georgia, and U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, the judge assigned to
the federal case against him for attempting to overturn the results of
the 2020 election.
At a rally in North Carolina on Wednesday, Trump did not go after Harris
on gender or racial grounds. Instead, he painted a potential Harris
presidency in apocalyptic terms.
"She is a radical left lunatic who will destroy our country," Trump
said.
Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said voters would reject Harris not
because of her race and gender, but because of her failed policies.
A spokesperson for Harris, whose nascent campaign has generated a
groundswell of grassroots fundraising and activism, said she is staying
focused on her work.
"These attacks are backfiring and even Republicans know it," said
Sarafina Chitika.
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U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, delivers remarks to the women and
men's National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Champion teams
in her first public appearance since President Joe Biden dropped out
of the 2024 race, on the South Lawn of the White House, Washington,
U.S., July 22, 2024. REUTERS/Nathan Howard/File Photo
LEWD COMMENTS
Online attacks against Harris were ramping up even before Biden
dropped out on Sunday, according to researchers and a Reuters review
of posts on the X platform, although exact data is hard to come by.
Some of the recent posts refer to sexual acts and speak of Harris'
past relationships in lewd terms. Others disparage her for not
having biological children, echoing a comment Trump running mate JD
Vance made in 2021, when he criticized Harris and other Democrats as
"a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own
lives."
Harris has two stepchildren with her husband, lawyer Doug Emhoff.
Emhoff's ex-wife on Wednesday called such attacks "baseless" and
described Harris as a "loving, nurturing, fiercely protective"
co-parent.
Disinformation researchers say the online attacks do not appear to
be coming from a specific epicenter and are now so prevalent that
most accounts are merely "amplifiers" of already-existing
narratives.
U.S. Representative Michael Cloud, a member of the ultraconservative
House Freedom Caucus, defended Republicans who have disparaged
Harris as a "DEI hire."
"Those were Biden's words, actually," Cloud said.
Biden has not called Harris a "DEI hire." At a campaign appearance
with Harris in May, he spoke of the values of DEI and having a
diverse administration. "And it starts at the top with the vice
president," Biden said.
Trump has nicknamed Harris "Laffin' Kamala," mocking her laugh, and
"Lyin' Kamala," claiming she tried to hide Biden's aging from the
public. At a Sunday rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the former
president called her "crazy" and "nuts."
Kelly Dittmar, a political science professor at Rutgers University,
said the nicknames appeared to be playing into stereotypes about
women's voices and emotions, as well as seeking to emulate African
American pronunciation.
"The actual laughing and cackling goes back to tropes about not
wanting to hear women's voices," Dittmar said. "It's not the laugh
itself. It's to characterize her as annoying. I think the nicknames
are trying to cue the fact she's Black."
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson, who attended a closed-door
meeting this week where party leaders urged members to concentrate
on policy issues, told Reuters on Thursday that he had not spoken to
Trump or the Trump campaign about how to message regarding Harris.
"This campaign will be about policies," Johnson said. "And I think
everybody will be discussing that in detail, and I think we'll win
on that basis."
Easley, the radio show host, said she suggested to Trump campaign
officials they engage Black allies more to counter Harris "without
the veil of racism being attached to it."
She and several other Black Republican women who spoke to Reuters
said they did not like the personal attacks, with some noting their
own experiences confronting higher standards and expectations as
Black women, or having their qualifications questioned.
"As a Black woman myself, I don't appreciate when people start
saying because of the color of your skin, that makes you a DEI hire.
I don't think that's fair to anyone," said Corrin Rankin, vice chair
of the California Republican Party, who said she met Harris when
they both worked in San Francisco.
However, Rankin said she felt Biden's vow to pick a woman or person
of color as his running mate in 2020 had allowed that term to take
hold.
Other Trump allies warned that his attacks could alienate some
voters.
"I am hoping that his advisers will encourage Trump to pull it
back," said Camilla Moore, chair of the Georgia Black Republican
Council. "Because it could hurt in the long run."
(Reporting by Helen Coster, Alexandra Ulmer and David Morgan;
Additional reporting by Stephanie Kelly and James Oliphant; Editing
by Colleen Jenkins and Daniel Wallis)
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