For a brief moment last week, it looked like Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) was breaking with the standard bearers of the Republican party by drawing a line at institutionalizing abject racism. Scott called out his GOP presidential primary opponent, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, under whose administration a new set of teaching standards will require imparting to public school students that slavery had benefits for the enslaved. Sure, itโs politically expedient to oppose something so egregious, but in the anti-Black politics of todayโs conservative movement, itโs almost always a political risk for a Black man to oppose a man like DeSantis rather than falling in line.But if you were prepared to entertain the idea that Scottโwhoโs also known for ethering meaningful police reform legislation in Congressโhad turned a new leaf, lay down that burden, dear brother. That shining moment is behind us. Instead, on Friday, Scott returned to form by vowing to enact one of Donald Trumpโs most infamously racist policy platforms, building The Wall.
Suggested Reading
โAs president of the United States, I will finish this wall, and I will use the available technology to surveil our border to stop fentanyl from killing another 70,000 Americans in the next 12 months,โ said Scott on Fox News.
Folks probably recall that building a wall along the Southern border to keep out people from Mexico was a key part of Trumpโs 2016 campaign. And if you have any doubts about whether or not this was racist, the speech announcing his campaign and his imagined wall might give you some hints.
โWhen Mexico sends its people, theyโre not sending their best,โ said Trump. โTheyโre not sending you. Theyโre not sending you. Theyโre sending people that have lots of problems, and theyโre bringing those problems with us. Theyโre bringing drugs. Theyโre bringing crime. Theyโre rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.โ
Now, the wall was obviously never completed. According to the Associated Press, the majority of the new wall construction under Trump was in place where a barrier already existed.
Creating a border wall would mean investing tens of billions of dollars into new construction. And According to the Brookings Institution, a wall would do little to stem drug smuggling. These barriers can also be highly dangerous. Water barriers, which were put up along the Texas border, were widely criticized for endangering the safety of migrants.
โBuild The Wallโ isnโt the only issue that Scott has decided to ally himself with Trump on over the last week. On Tuesday, the South Carolina Senator argued that the Department of Justice was being unfair to Trump by prosecuting him for his attempt to overturn the 2020 election.
Although Scott might be willing to stand-up to his party on something as blatant as โslavery was actually good,โ it seems heโs going to continue sticking to the party line on pretty much everything else.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.