Itβs no secret that at The Root ...weβve made it our responsibility to call out Former President Donald Trump for his racially-insensitive remarks and often divisive politics. We speak directly to our viewers but recently gave South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott the opportunity to be open and honest with those in the Black community who might not trust him.
Scott agreed to talk and sat down with our Editor-in-chief, Tatsha Robertson, to discuss his relationship with the former president while also addressing criticism from Black people. The Root did not hold back with our questions, and Scott did not hold back with his admiration for Trump, even coming to his defense on several occasions.
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During the interview, Scott attempted to pull Trump out of the fire for the βBlack jobsβ comment he made during the June 27 debate with President Joe Biden. As a reminder, the former president cited part of the countryβs ongoing inflation crisis as a consequence of Bidenβs relaxed border control policy.
βHis [Bidenβs] big kill on the Black people is the millions of people that heβs allowed to come in through the border. Theyβre taking Black jobs now, and it could be 18β it could be 19 and even 20 million people,β Trump said.
During an interview with The Root, Scott saidΒ the former presidentβs words were taken βout of context.β
βI think what he [Trump] meant to say was the fact that two-thirds of the jobs he created....went to African Americans, Hispanics, and women,β Scott said. βI think we should take a whole look at the picture, and I donβt think that happens.β
Trump concluded his debate remarks by emphasizing that βtheyβre taking Black jobs, and theyβre taking Hispanic jobs.β A 2024 paper shows immigration actually has positive impacts on the economy and overall employment.
Thereβs no recent data to support Trumpβs claims, but a 2007 study noted a link between an immigration increase and a slight decrease in wages for Black men, though other factors were also listed.
Scott said the βwhole look at the pictureβ should include racially motivated comments Biden made in the past. βWhen youβre looking for someone thatβs said really inflammatory things, it seems like a lot of people close their eyes if itβs a Democrat,β he said.
He also mentioned Bidenβs conversation with βThe Breakfast Clubβsβ Charlamagne Tha God during his 2020 bid for president. The then-vice president told voters βif you have a problem figuring out whether youβre for me or Trump, then you ainβt Black.β
Biden received backlash from several media outlets following his comment.
Scott insisted that he βwants [Republicans] to be measured with the same stickβ the same scaleβ as Democrats. When asked why he supports a candidate who has a long history of making βracistβ remarks, Scott deflected, again pointing his finger back to Biden.
He also suggested that the media is to blame for the βbiasedβ perception of Republicans like Trump and himself. βWhoever they [media outlets] say I am, theyβre not just trying to distort my picture, theyβre trying to lie about my record,β he said, adding that itβs βincredibly unfortunateβ that the media makes βBlack success today about liberal success.β
Stick around for more stories today from the Tim Scott/The Root interview, along with video of the conversation.
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