WASHINGTON (AP) — Ever since a racist video was posted on President Donald Trump’s social media account, the White Home has provided shifting responses.
First it dismissed “pretend outrage,” then it deleted the submit and blamed a workers member.
Trump later instructed reporters Friday that “I didn’t make a mistake.” The Republican president insisted that earlier than the video was posted, nobody noticed the half that depicted former President Barack Obama and former first woman Michelle Obama as primates within the jungle.
However the chair of the Congressional Black Caucus had a special rationalization when she spoke to The Related Press.
“It’s very clear that there was an intent to hurt folks, to harm folks, with this video,” stated Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y.
The AP interviewed Clarke, who leads the group of greater than 60 Black Home and Senate members, hours after the video was deleted on Friday, and she or he was unsparing in her criticism. “As my mom would say, ‘Too late. Mercy’s gone,’” Clarke stated.
Right here is an interview transcript, edited for size and readability.
AP: What was your response whenever you noticed that the submit?
CLARKE: We’re coping with a bigoted and racist regime. … Each week we’re, because the American folks, put ready the place we’ve to answer one thing very merciless or one thing extraordinarily off-putting that this administration does. It’s part of their M.O. at this level.
AP: Do you purchase the White Home rationalization that this was an aide’s mistake?
CLARKE: They don’t inform the reality. If there wasn’t a local weather, a poisonous and racist local weather throughout the White Home, we wouldn’t see the sort of conduct no matter who it’s coming from. … Right here we’re, within the yr 2026, celebrating the 250th anniversary of the US of America, the one hundredth anniversary of the commemoration of Black historical past, and that is what comes out of the White Home on a Friday morning. It’s beneath all of us.
AP: Has there been any contact between the White Home and the Congressional Black Caucus on this? Might there be any good-faith alternate?
CLARKE: There was no outreach from the White Home. We actually didn’t anticipate there to be. The outreach has to occur prior to those kind of juvenile antics.
AP: Republican criticism constructed extra shortly Friday than it has throughout earlier Trump controversies. What do you make of that?
CLARKE: It’s not misplaced on them, our communities that we signify, that elections are arising. So it’s not misplaced on my colleagues, both. In the event that they wish to align themselves with the sort of actually profane imagery, the sort of bigoted and racist assault on a former sitting president and his spouse, they’re throwing their lot in with a person who has proven himself to be a shame.
AP: It’s not frequent for President Trump to retract something. What does that point out to you that he did?
CLARKE: I feel it’s extra of a political expediency than it’s any ethical compass. … As my mom would say, “Too late. Mercy’s gone.”
AP: What extra do you hope to see from the White Home about this?
CLARKE: My hope is that we are able to comprise the hurt that they’re doing. There are Black youngsters who’re listening to their president … seeing what he’s posting on Fact Social (and) it would have an effect on how they view management of their very own nation. … I feel that this administration has a chance to vary course. They all the time do. We depart room for that. However, sadly, Donald Trump is hardwired this fashion.
AP: Is there the rest you’d like so as to add?
CLARKE: As a democracy, we’ve to face up collectively towards the sort of racism, the sort of bigotry, this type of hatred that’s coming from the president of the US and people who encompass him. … It’s very clear that there was an intent to hurt folks, to harm folks, with this video. In any other case, it wouldn’t have stayed up for 12 hours.
___ Barrow reported from Atlanta.
















