Tag: american bridge
Pro-Trump Outlet Uses Coronavirus Fears To Fan Anti-Chinese Racism

Pro-Trump Outlet Uses Coronavirus Fears To Fan Anti-Chinese Racism

A Trump-aligned group described Chinese people as “disease carriers” and used racist tropes about Chinese food in a recent blog post about the the new coronavirus.

America First Policies, a Trump-aligned nonprofit that promotes his policies, wrote a post about the new virus, sometimes referred to as the Wuhan coronavirus, on Jan. 29. In it, the authors criticized the Chinese government for allowing “potential disease carriers” to leave Wuhan during the Lunar New Year holiday and pushed racist tropes mocking Chinese food as dirty.

“Wildlife is a sought after delicacy by China’s growing middle class. (Bat bouillabaisse or kung pao mice anyone?),” the group wrote.

The article was first flagged by American Bridge, a progressive opposition research organization.

Tropes associating Asian cultures with “dirty” food habits have been around for years. As the Los Angeles Times notes, “Yellow Peril,” the claim that Asians and Asian culture are somehow a threat to the western world — specifically the western white world — go back as far as 19th century Europe. The new virus has only served as a jump-off point for those seeking to further that racist narrative.

In the wake of the outbreak, which began in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, for instance, hysteria was sparked after a video of a Chinese woman holding chopsticks and biting into a cooked bat went viral. Various outlets promoted the video as proof of the disease’s origin and blamed “dirty” Chinese food habits for the outbreak.

In reality, the woman, a travel show host, had shot the video years earlier in Palau, a nation in the western Pacific. In a letter responding to the outcry, she noted that fruit bats were in fact a “daily dish in many countries.”

In an email this week, Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA), the first Chinese American woman elected to Congress and the chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, called the anti-Chinese language in the America First Policies post “deeply offensive.”

“It’s not surprising to see a Trump-inspired organization parroting his racist and xenophobic rhetoric, but that does not make it any less dangerous,” she said. Such language, she continued, “endangers the Chinese-American community by encouraging fear and mistrust.”

“Already, we are seeing the impact of this in our communities, including a recent hate crime in which a Chinese-American woman in New York City was attacked in the Subway simply for wearing a face mask,” Chu lamented. “It’s shameful to see an organization not only spread racism and hysteria, but encourage it.”

Kyle Morse, a spokesperson for American Bridge, said in an email that the Trump-aligned group was stoking “fear” and dividing the country by furthering racist narratives.

“Donald Trump and his allies have been willing to use racist, anti-Semitic, and xenophobic language to stoke fear and divide the American people,” Morse said. “Voices from the Trump universe are far more focused on denigrating and dehumanizing rather than developing a comprehensive plan to tackle this pressing public health crisis.”

America First Policies did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The group has had issues with racism in the past. In March 2018, Carl Higbie, who was Trump’s chief of external affairs for the Corporation for National and Community Service, joined American First Policies as its director of advocacy.

But he was soon let go when funders complained about his past comments, including an instance in which he claimed that black women think “breeding is a form of government employment,” and another in which he said, “I just don’t like Muslim people.”

In an interview on Fox News in 2016, Higbie also defended rumors about Trump wanting to implement a “Muslim registry” by citing Japanese internment during World War II.

“We’ve done it with Iran, back a while ago, we did it during World War II with Japanese — which, call it what you will, it may be wrong….”

Then-host Megyn Kelly stopped him. “Come on, you’re not proposing we go back to the days of internment camps,” she said. “You know better than to suggest that. That’s the kind of thing that gets people scared.”

Higbie responded by saying he was “not proposing that at all” before adding, “I’m just saying there’s precedent for it.”

In addition to America First Policies’ pro-Trump bent, Vice President Mike Pence has been linked to the group in the past and spoke at an event it organized in August 2019. He is also featured prominently on the group’s site.

IMAGE: US Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA).

Published with permission of The American Independent Foundation.

Marco Rubio Launches Latest Attack — Against Himself

Marco Rubio Launches Latest Attack — Against Himself

Marco Rubio might not be doing the best job responding to criticism that he’s always remiss in his duties in the Senate. In the past, he’s explained his frequent absences away by saying his presidential campaign is more important, and his latest excuse: Rubio explains that people in the Senate — like himself — won’t help America.

“I have missed votes this year,” Rubio acknowledged Tuesday morning, at a town hall event in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. “You know why? Because while as a senator I can help shape the agenda, only a president can set the agenda. We’re not gonna fix America with senators and congressmen.”

Video has been posted to YouTube by the Democratic-aligned campaign tracking group, American Bridge.

By saying this, Rubio has managed to combine two different attacks against him by his GOP rivals, into a self-inflicted one-two punch. The first, of course, is Jeb Bush’s attempts to hammer his former protégé for giving up on the Senate, and even having called for him to resign from that lofty office. The second would be Chris Christie, who has said senators don’t know how to make consequential decisions, and people should vote for a strong executive like himself.

But it’s a real trick to combine these attacks into the space of a single breath — and to do it against yourself.

Photo: U.S. Republican presidential candidate and Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) arrives at the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) Presidential Candidates Forum in Washington, December 3, 2015. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Trey Gowdy Throws Credulous Reporters Under The Bus

Trey Gowdy Throws Credulous Reporters Under The Bus

The confusion of the House Select Committee on Benghazi is amusing to observe, even as its chairman, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC), scrambles frantically to salvage credibility amid the expensive fiasco he has created. Trying to clean up the appalling mess left behind by his decision to pursue his committee’s conspiracy theories involving Sidney Blumenthal – subpoenaed and questioned for nine hours last week — Gowdy has abruptly thrown the New York Times under the bus.

As the overture to Blumenthal’s subpoena, the Timespublished a highly speculative story on May 29, based on leaks and innuendo from the committee. According to that story, the former journalist and Clinton confidant wrote a series of “intelligence” memos about Libya that he sent to Hillary Clinton while she was Secretary of State – supposedly in hopes of advancing the interests of “business associates” who wanted to undertake humanitarian enterprises in that country.

In the days since Blumenthal’s June 16 appearance to answer the committee’s questions behind closed doors, it has become obvious that most of its inquiries had nothing to do with Libya and everything to do with politics – notably involving Blumenthal’s perfectly legitimate connections to Clinton and their mutual friend David Brock at Media Matters and American Bridge. (Both Brock and Blumenthal are longtime friends of mine.)

Even as they have continued to leak selected snippets of Blumenthal’s testimony to deflect embarrassment, the Republicans have come under increasing pressure from Democrats to release the full transcript. Despite the Washington press corps’ overriding concern with “transparency” in everything Clinton, few reporters have demanded the same from Gowdy so far — presumably because they want those leaks to continue.

On June 22, Gowdy dispatched a seething letter to Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), the ranking Democrat on the committee, in response to Democratic demands that he release the transcript. In four single-spaced frothing pages, he tried to defend the Republicans’ misuse of taxpayer funds for an inquisition that has in no way advanced the public’s understanding of the Benghazi tragedy (which has already been probed exhaustively by 10 congressional panels and a State Department Accountability Review Board, without producing findings of any wrongdoing by Clinton, President Barack Obama, National Security Advisor Susan Rice, or any other top administration official).

About halfway through his letter to Cummings, Gowdy writes:

“It is also important that I correct certain misapprehensions that have, inadvertently I am sure, made their way into media accounts quoting Democrat sources. The committee never expected Witness Blumenthal to be able to answer questions about the attacks in Benghazi, Libya, since 1) Witness Blumenthal was not in Benghazi at the time of the attacks, 2) has never been to Libya, 3) did not collect any of the data passed on to Secretary of State Clinton, 4) did not evaluate the reliability or accuracy of any of the data he passed on to Secretary of State Clinton and 5) was dealing with information gatherers who may have had a financial stake in Libya.”

Note that phrase “never expected.” Never? With those two words, Gowdy scuttles the premise of the original Times article — which attributed the Libya memos directly to Blumenthal. Did Gowdy and his staff know that Blumenthal had simply transmitted intelligence memos written by his friend Tyler Drumheller, the former CIA European chief? Did the committee sources tell the Times reporters that Blumenthal had written them? Or is Gowdy now merely pretending that he knew about Drumheller’s authorship all along? According to my sources, the committee Republicans were stunned to learn on June 16 that Blumenthal had never set foot in Libya.

So without perusing the Q&A in Blumenthal’s deposition – a document that Gowdy obviously feels will embarrass him — it is hard to tell what kind of game he has played with the Times and other credulous journalists, but it doesn’t look good for him or them. An investigation that Gowdy once claimed would uncover crucial information about Benghazi has devolved into a sideshow featuring a Clinton friend who (as Gowdy now acknowledges) never knew anything about the attacks firsthand, but whose political advice to the Democratic frontrunner is of great interest to the committee’s partisan majority.

Video: Rand Paul Aide Licks Tracker Camera

Video: Rand Paul Aide Licks Tracker Camera

Okay, this is weird.

The liberal group American Bridge has just posted a video from a Rand Paul town hall event in Londonderry, New Hampshire. And on the video is a man they have identified as Paul’s New Hampshire political director, David Chesley — putting a rather unusual twist on the old routine of blocking the view of the opposition’s cameraman.