WATCH: Breitbart News Challenges Beto O’Rourke on Charlottesville ‘Very Fine People’ Hoax
CHARLESTON, South Carolina — Breitbart News asked former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-TX), Democratic presidential hopeful, about his remark Monday evening at the College of Charleston in which he repeated the “very fine people” hoax about President Donald Trump’s reaction to the riots in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.
During the event, part of the College of Charleston’s “Bully Pulpit” series, O’Rourke claimed that President Trump is responsible for acts of white supremacist violence in the United States. He misquoted Trump several times, claiming, for example, that the president had referred to immigrants as an “infestation” and “animals” (he was referring to gangs, specifically the El Salvadoran gang MS-13, which rapes, murders, and mutilates its victims).
O’Rourke claimed that Trump’s rhetoric was “giving permission for exactly what took place in El Paso on August 3rd” (i.e. the mass shooting that killed 22 people). He added: “And lest you think this is an isolated strain of his hatred — this is the same man who called Klansmen, and neo-Nazis, and white supremacists ‘very fine people’ days after they were marching in the streets of Charlottesville, Virginia, chanting: ‘Jews, you will not replace us!’”
O’Rourke also said that the U.S. needed a president who would “heal” rather than “inflame” national tensions.
In a press conference afterwards, Breitbart News asked O’Rourke why he continued to misquote the president:
Breitbart News: The president, Trump, after Charlottesville, said that he condemned the white supremacists and the neo-Nazis “totally.” Are you aware that you are misquoting him, or partially quoting him — not quoting the full extent of his remarks in Charlottesville? Are you concerned that that might inflame tensions rather than heal divisions?
Beto O’Rourke: No. I believe in the truth, and in being honest about what the president was doing. And it’s not just that he referred to Klansmen as “very fine people,” it’s that he attempted to ban all people of one religion from this country. We’re constantly warned of an “invasion” of killers, and rapists, and animals, from Central America and Mexico, though we know that they commit crimes at a far lower rate than those who are born in this country. This is a very coordinated attack on minorities in this country, on the most vulnerable and the defenseless, for political gain for the president. And he knows full well that it not only offends our sensibilities as a country, it is leading to violence and the taking of lives, as we saw in El Paso.
Breitbart News: But he said that he wasn’t referring to the neo-Nazis and the Klansman — just a clarification — he said he wasn’t referring to the Klansmen as “very fine people,” that he was referring to non-violent protesters, left and right.
Beto O’Rourke: He has openly courted the support of white supremacists and that’s a matter of fact and a matter of record. He has repeatedly, though given the opportunity, refused to disavow their support. I reference — and you can check the tape on this one — at a rally in Florida in May, when someone says, “Shoot them!”, referring to immigrants, he laughs and smiles and he joked about that. If that is not a total failure of leadership, and a total inducement to violence and hatred, I don’t know what is. And you can also check a rise in hate crimes in this country, every single year that he’s been a candidate, or in office, and in fact in those counties that hosted a Trump rally, you saw a more than 200% increase in hate crimes there. He is very much responsible for much of the violence, the hatred, and the racism that you see in this country.
Almost everything O’Rourke claimed was false or misleading, in addition to the false claim that he called neo-Nazis “very fine people”:
- Trump has repeatedly disavowed the support of white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and other extremists, and has delivered several major speeches and statements in which he specifically condemned them — in addition to the press conference on the Charlottesville riots.
- The president never enacted a ban on all Muslims; his executive orders restricting travel from several terror-prone countries (on a list originally flagged by the Obama administration) did not apply to all Muslim countries; included non-Muslim countries, in later versions; and was upheld in 2017 by the U.S. Supreme Court.
- The term “animals” referred to members of MS-13, not to ordinary migrants (legal or illegal); and the claim that illegal aliens commit few crimes is debatable only if one ignores the crime of illegal crossing itself.
- Trump was not endorsing the heckler’s “shoot them!” statement. As Rich Lowry, the editor of National Review — an outlet that openly opposed Trump’s candidacy for president — noted, Trump’s reaction was an indication of how unacceptable the statement was: “Trump smiles and shakes his head and says, ‘That’s only in the Panhandle you can get away with that statement.’ Clearly, this is not meant as an endorsement of the statement, but a good-natured way to acknowledge its outrageousness. … You can criticize how Trump handled the rally-goer’s shout … But the idea that this shouted interruption, in the midst of a long Trump riff about how we need to make lawful changes to address the border crisis, somehow constitutes presidential incitement to mass murder is manifestly absurd.”
- Reported hate crimes have risen, but O’Rourke confuses correlation with causation. Even the New York Times was cautious about the meaning of the data, since the rise could simply mean that a higher percentage of hate crimes were being reported. One thousand new agencies joined the FBI’s study in the latest year of reporting. A Gallup poll on race relations dates the decline in race relations to 2014 — roughly the same time the “Black Lives Matter” movement emerged as a major political force, with President Barack Obama’s backing.
- The claim that Trump rallies are associated with a rise in hate rimes was recently ripped apart by Robert VerBruggen, National Review‘s deputy managing editor, who noted that the statistic was created without accounting for the possibility that some counties had higher rates of hate crimes before Trump rallies. And again, O’Rourke confuses correlation with causation.
O’Rourke also told the gathering at the College of Charleston, most of whom were students, that white supremacy was “manifest in every part of American life.”
Breitbart News also confronted former vice president Joe Biden at the Iowa State Fair last month for misquoting Trump on Charlottesville.
Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He earned an A.B. in Social Studies and Environmental Science and Public Policy from Harvard College, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School. He is a winner of the 2018 Robert Novak Journalism Alumni Fellowship. He is also the co-author of How Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, which is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.
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