WaPo Editorial Board: Trump needs to get his messaging straight on the Bahamas
Source: Washington Post
Trump needs to get his messaging straight on the Bahamas
By Editorial Board
September 12, 2019 at 6:09 p.m. EDT
VIRTUALLY EVERYONE in the northernmost Bahamian islands ravaged by Hurricane Dorian, the Abacos and Grand Bahama, has been displaced their homes leveled, their businesses wiped out, their roads and other basic infrastructure destroyed. Some 70,000 people on those islands, about a sixth of the Bahamas population, have lost their homes; others are in desperate straits. Washington could and should do more to help.
The Trump administration should start by getting its messaging straight. The acting commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, Mark Morgan, has signaled to survivors that the agency would exercise its discretion to allow them to enter the United States even if their documents were incomplete a reasonable gesture given that many Bahamians might have lost passports or been unable to access visas or other papers in the storms chaotic aftermath.
President Trumps own messaging has been discordant and characteristically counterproductive. Immediately after the storm wreaked havoc on the islands, he pledged U.S. help with recovery efforts and said, Were working hard, were with you, and God bless you. Then, in Trumpian fashion, he pivoted a few days later, warning that some very bad people and some very bad gang members and some very, very bad drug dealers residing in the Bahamas might sneak into the United States. Hence, said the president, We have to be very careful.
News outlets reported this week that temporary protected status the program that allows foreigners who are victims of wars and natural disasters to remain and work in the United States rather than return to their home countries would not be considered for Bahamians. The government of the Bahamas has made no formal request that TPS be extended for its citizens already in the United States, perhaps not wanting to antagonize Mr. Trump, who has tried to end the program for Haitians, Salvadorans, Hondurans and others living in the United States who are beneficiaries.
Mr. Trumps abiding hostility toward people seeking short- or long-term refuge in this country cannot be allowed to befoul the unusually close business and family ties between the United States and the Bahamas. South Florida is home to a large Bahamian community, and U.S. tourists regularly flock to the islands. Bahamians generally do not need visas to visit the United States, providing they have valid passports and clean police records.
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Read more: https://beta.washingtonpost.com/opinions/bahamians-are-our-neighbors-trump-should-treat-them-that-way/2019/09/12/56f2cefa-d56d-11e9-9610-fb56c5522e1c_story.html
murielm99
(30,733 posts)it must have slipped his mind that most Bahamians are brown.