President Donald Trump has claimed in a Fox News interview that he has done more for the black community than any other president in history.
As he opened up on his vision of the legacy of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, Trump acknowledged that one of the most popular presidents in US history, acclaimed for signing the Emancipation Proclamation that ended slavery, had done a lot for the black community.
However, Trump took the opportunity to tout his own actions as more remarkable than those of his predecessors.
“I think I’ve done more for the black community than any other president. And let's take a pass on Abraham Lincoln, because he did good. Although it's always questionable, you know, in other words, the end result,” said Trump.
As Fox News host Harris Faulkner quipped "Well, we are free, Mr. President, so I think he did pretty well," referring to Lincoln, Donald Trump responded:
"We are free…You understand what I mean."
"Yeah, I get it," said Faulkner.
Most historians are unanimous that Abraham Lincoln and former President Lyndon B. Johnson scored the greatest legislative achievements in advancing civil rights, according to The New York Times, with Johnson advocating a Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Fair Housing Act.
Third Week of Protests
In the same interview, Donald Trump downplayed mass protests over the police killing of African American man George Floyd in police custody, which are into their third week.
While Donald Trump acknowledged that George Floyd’s death was a “terrible thing”, he insisted that many of the thousands of protesters were oblivious to what they were protesting for.
“I think you had protesters for different reasons, you had protesting also because they just didn't know,” Trump responded, claiming he had seen reports where protesters “really weren’t able to say” why they were out in the streets.
The death of George Floyd on May 25 in Minneapolis, when a white officer kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes, and video footage of the incident caught by onlookers that went viral, triggered widespread protests from coast to coast and even across the globe.
While some demonstrations were peaceful, on other occasions the protests took a violent turn, resulting in looting and destruction.
As the mass action, spearheaded by the Black Lives Matter movement, swelled in size, its activists have whittled their heated calls down to proposed specific police reforms and an end to systemic racism.
Trump's interview for Fox News came as he traveled to Dallas to preview forthcoming executive legislation on police reform, reported POLITICO.
The President said on 11 June at a roundtable with law enforcement in Dallas that he was finalizing an executive order focused on police reform.
“We’re working to finalize an executive order that will encourage police departments nationwide to meet the most current professional standards for the use of force, including tactics for de-escalation… Also, we’ll encourage pilot programs that allow social workers to join certain law enforcement officers so that they work together,” said Trump.
Responding to calls from activists to defund the police and use the resources towards other community needs, Donald Trump said he sought to increase investment in law enforcement.
“We’re not defunding police. If anything we’re going the other route… We’re going to make sure our police are well trained, perfectly trained, they have the best equipment.”