Video games. Homelessness. Social media. After shootings, Republicans have avoided talking about Trump and white nationalism.

Washington Post logoTrump and Republican leaders are largely focusing their talking points following two mass shootings — including one in El Paso in which the suspect may be charged with a hate crime — on everything but the obvious factors: They discussed video games, homelessness and social media. Largely left out: guns; and the rise of white nationalism and whether Trump’s racially divisive language factors into that.

President Trump’s own FBI director has indicated that white supremacy-related domestic terrorism is on the rise. That rise has been frequently noted in the past few weeks, as Trump has been escalating his anti-immigrant rhetoric.

In an address Monday, Trump acknowledged the racial hatred apparently at play in the El Paso shooting by saying something he rarely does: “In one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy.” He made no connection between those things and his own racially divisive rhetoric.

View the complete August 5 article by Amber Phillips on The Washington Post website here.