Americans
remembered civil rights hero Martin Luther King on his holiday Monday, a day
after US President Donald Trump vehemently denied he is a racist amid an uproar
over a reported slur.
The denial
late Sunday came three days after Trump was quoted as calling African nations
and Haiti "shithole countries," setting off a storm of condemnation
that threatened to derail a bipartisan compromise on immigration.
"I'm
not a racist. I am the least racist person you have ever interviewed,"
Trump told reporters as he arrived at the Trump International Golf Club in West
Palm Beach, Florida for dinner with Republican House Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy.
Trump also
denied, once again, making the offensive remarks attributed to him -- despite
the insistence of at least one senator that the president used the words
repeatedly during a White House meeting on immigration Thursday.
The furor
showed little sign of abating Monday, placing America's troubled history of
racism center stage -- and not for the first time in Trump's year-old
presidency -- on a national holiday honoring King.
Trump
himself marked the day with a videotaped speech posted on Twitter that alluded
to King's celebrated "I Have a Dream" speech.
"Dr.
King's dream is our dream. It is the American dream," Trump said.
African
American leaders, however, expressed deep concern about the direction of the
nation.
Dr King's
example
The
president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,
Cornell Brooks, evoked "the eloquence of Dr. King's example" in a
tweet.
"While
this is the first #MLKDay with an unrepentant & unreconstructed racist in
the White House, we are neither intimidated by insult nor tweet — we are
prayerful not fearful," he said.
"I
think this man, this president, is taking us back to another place," said
John Lewis, a Georgia congressman who marched with King in the 1960s.
"I
think he is a racist," he said Sunday on ABC's "This Week."
Basketball
star LeBron James said Trump's example emboldened people with racist views.
"The
guy in control has given people and racism... an opportunity to be out and
outspoken without fear. And that's the fearful thing for us because it's with
you, and it's around every day," James said.
Marches
around the US to commemorate King, which take place annually, took on special
significance this year following Trump's alleged slur against African countries
and Haiti.
"Our
president has shown exactly who he is by what he's saying and, you know, people
are not ignorant. You have to use your own mind, your own judgment as far as
how you feel that he is," said Michelle Toyer, who was marching in
Washington.
Aiyi'nah
Ford was more blunt: "I think he's the epitome of racism, homophobia, so
many things. He's a problem."
Similar
sentiments were expressed at marches in New York and Los Angeles while a small
group of demonstrators waving Haitian flags faced off with Trump supporters in
West Palm Beach.
Trump has
sought to move off the defensive by accusing Democrats of sabotaging a
bipartisan bid to reach a deal on immigration reform.
"We are
ready, willing and able to make a deal but they don't want to," he said in
a tweet Monday, quoting his own comments to reporters the night before.
Hundreds of
thousands of immigrants brought to the country illegally as children --
so-called "Dreamers" -- face deportation unless a compromise can be
reached that would grant them rights to stay.
Deal on
'Dreamers'
A bipartisan
deal to resolve the Dreamers issue in return for changes demanded by
Republicans in the way visas are allocated collapsed in acrimony Thursday over
Trump's remarks.
Certain
Republicans have rallied behind Trump, casting doubt on what he said at the
meeting with Republican and Democratic lawmakers.
Senator
David Purdue, a Republican from Georgia who attended the session, called
charges that Trump is racist "ridiculous" and insisted reports on his
remarks were a "gross misrepresentation."
Purdue and
another Republican participant, Senator Tom Cotton, had said previously they
did not specifically recall Trump making the comments attributed to him.
Senator Dick
Durbin, a Democratic sponsor of the bipartisan deal on the Dreamers who was
present at the meeting, said Trump made the quoted "shithole
countries" remark not once, but repeatedly.
Trump issued
a fresh denial on Monday, saying: "Senator Dicky Durbin totally
misrepresented what was said at the DACA meeting. Deals can't get made when
there is no trust! Durbin blew DACA and is hurting our Military."
DACA refers
to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program which has given legal
status to Dreamers and protected them from deportation.
Senator
Lindsey Graham, another Republican participant, told fellow South Carolina
Senator Tim Scott the media reports of the comments were "basically
accurate," according to The Post and Courier.
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