Yang says 'no choice' but to call Trump a white supremacist


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Yang says 'no choice' but to call Trump a white supremacist

Faris Bseiso, CNN

2020 Democratic hopeful Andrew Yang said Friday that there is "no choice" but 
to call President Donald Trump a w...
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by Faris Bseiso, CNN
Updated 10:29 AM ET, Fri August 9, 2019
Washington (CNN)2020 Democratic hopeful Andrew Yang said Friday that there is 
"no choice" but to call President Donald Trump a white supremacist, becoming 
the latest of the Democratic field to label the President with that term.
In an interview on "New Day," Yang said "if someone acts and speaks in a 
certain way then you have no choice but to say that's what he is," when asked 
by CNN's John Berman if he would call the President a white supremacist.
The comment comes after other Democratic presidential candidates have called 
the President a white supremacist in the wake of the two mass shootings, one 
involving a white supremacist suspect who is believed to have authored a 
racist, anti-immigrant document targeting Hispanics, as well as Trump's recent 
series of racist comments that included his calls for four minority 
congresswomen to "go back" to the countries from which they came. Three of the 
four lawmakers are natural-born US citizens.
"In this case, I mean, it's very clear the President's actions and words have 
conveyed a strong sense to many Americans that he has white supremacist beliefs 
and that's the only standard we can go by," Yang said.Sens. Elizabeth Warren 
and Kirsten Gillibrand have both said Trump is a white supremacist, making 
their rebukes of the President some of the strongest from the crowded field of 
Democratic presidential candidates.
Other candidates, such as Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Rep. Beto O'Rourke, 
have agreed with the characterization of the President as a white nationalist. 
Rep. Tim Ryan, another 2020 hopeful, told CNN's Jake Tapper that "the white 
nationalists think (Trump's) a white nationalist. And that's the crux of the 
problem."
Former Vice President Joe Biden, who was quick to connect Trump's racist 
rhetoric to the mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, stopped 
short of calling the President a white supremacist outright at the Iowa State 
Fair on Thursday.
"Why are you so hooked on that? You just want me to say the words so I sound 
like everybody else," Biden told a reporter. "I'm not everybody else -- I'm Joe 
Biden. I've always been who I am. I'm staying the way I am. He is encouraging 
white supremacists -- you can determine what that means."


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