Bill Clinton Draws Flak for 'Trumpish' Comments on American Muslims
Former President Bill Clinton’s speech at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) on Tuesday night, largely focused on humanizing his wife, is drawing criticism for its characterization of American Muslims.
“If you’re a Muslim and you love America and freedom and you hate terror, stay here and help us win and make a future together, we want you,” Clinton said toward the end of his address.
But as Peter Beinart, contributing editor for The Atlantic, wrote late Tuesday night: “The problem is in the assumption. American Muslims should be viewed exactly the same way other Americans are. If they commit crimes, then they should be prosecuted, just like other Americans. But they should not have to prove that they ‘love America and freedom’ and ‘hate terror’ to ‘stay here.’ Their value as Americans is inherent, not instrumental. Their role as Americans is not to ‘help us win’ the ‘war on terror.'”
Beinart continued, “Whether Clinton meant to or not, he lapsed into Trumpism: the implication that Muslims are a class apart, deserving of special scrutiny and surveillance, guilty of terrorist sympathies until proven innocent.”
Dr. Muqtedar Khan, an associate professor in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Delaware, responded to Clinton’s remarks in a piece for The Islamic Monthly:
“Let’s hope that Hillary Clinton can include Muslims in her speech tomorrow that does not fall in to the same semantic traps as others during this election season,” Khan wrote.
Users on Twitter expressed similar reservations:
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And Ahmed Rehab, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)’s Chicago branch, wrote on Facebook:
Meanwhile, MSNBC host Rachel Maddow said she found Clinton’s opening lines “shocking and weird.”
“A+ for the end of the speech,” she said. “But I think the beginning of the speech was a controversial way to start, honestly. Talking about ‘the girl,’ ‘a girl.’ Leading with this long story about him being attracted to an unnamed girl.”
“Building her whole political story for the whole first half of the speech around her marriage to him,” Maddow continued. “Unless there were worries that this was going to be too feminist a convention, that was not a feminist way to start. But the end of the speech was really good.”
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