Close
Current temperature in Boston - 62 °
BECOME A MEMBER
Get access to a personalized news feed, our newsletter and exclusive discounts on everything from shows to local restaurants, All for free.
Already a member? Sign in.
The Bay State Banner
BACK TO TOP
The Bay State Banner
POST AN AD SIGN IN

Trending Articles

Gobble gobble! It’s turkey giveaway time

Study: Life expectancy of Black people shortens

It's Boston Latin vs. Boston English in rivals' 137th Thanksgiving day game

READ PRINT EDITION

Cheers to Omarosa for coming in out of the Trump cold

Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Omarosa Manigault has taken some of the biggest hits a writer can get for her tell-all about her dealings inside the Trump menagerie. She has been lambasted as a two-bit opportunist. She has been harangued as a shameless apologist for Trump’s virtual unreconstructed racism who’s now trying to make a buck from her co-signing of that. She has been reviled as a no-talent liar, whose tell-all book wouldn’t raise an eyebrow without a healthy dose of salacious, unsubstantiated Trump gossip to sell it. Worst of all from Trump, she’s a “low life.”

The roundhouse trashing of Omarosa is less important than what she has said and done since getting the boot from the White House.  In fact, even before she got the ax she gave a tiny hint that the Trump White House is every bit the hate mongering, crude, ignorant, race baiting White House that time has proven it to be. That’s when she took a mild backhand slap at Trump for saying that the guy was wrong after he initially refused to call the white nationalists out after their rampage in Charlottesville in August 2017.

This wasn’t exactly the revelation of the ages about Trump. But what was revealing and important was that the hit on him came from the only black who Trump deemed worthy enough to dragoon into his circus show and who publicly said it. She followed that by flatly saying she’d never vote or support him again, and implied that she shouldn’t have been a willing accomplice, aiding and abetting his raw, baiting, bigotry in the first place. Her mea culpa won’t earn her a single brownie point from the pack of Omarosa loathers.

Omarosa, though, isn’t the only black who’s grabbed a job in conservative Republican presidential administrations.  Nixon, Reagan, and the Bushes’ administrations had them. They all loudly argued that if someone black were not in there with them, then they’d ignore totally ignore black interests, or worse. The brutal reality is that if Omarosa had said no to Trump’s offer for a spot in his administration it would not have made him any more blatantly anti-black. There may well have been instances where she was able to influence Trump such as his acknowledgement of the importance of increased aid to black colleges and minority businesses and his slight back away from his initial racist outburst after he Charlottesville violence. That’s a story that she’ll have to tell.

The real reason Omarosa deserves a bit of a back pat is her book. In between the non-stop vilification of it and her from many corners, it does confirm that Trump is a ruthless, take-no-prisoner racial provocateur. He will step on anyone who gets in his way to his stirring up the racial cauldron for self-serving political and personal ends.

Saying this doesn’t come with some personal and professional risk for Omarosa. Trump, with his long, unforgiving Mafia boss vendetta memory, will do everything he can to sabotage her and her entertainment career. Whatever stash she got from her tell-all book is not going to shield her from that retribution, and the cash certainly won’t last forever.

She was a bought and paid for insider, and yes, there is a large dose of shamelessness to that. It was fueled by the absolute lure of seeing her name in the even bigger lights than on a TV show when she said yes to Trump’s job offer.

For better or worse, though, she did represent a black presence in an administration that’s about as lily white as anyone could imagine a White House being. Her tenure there is long past. And now she’s willing to go public about the racial viciousness of the Trump regime. Coming from someone who sat right their elbow to elbow with him, and for a time put a happy face on his racial viciousness, to renounce and denounce it is cause for cheer.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst.