Trump campaign uses misleading posts, racist trope to attack Harris on crime
Trump campaign uses misleading posts, racist trope to attack Harris on crime
The posts are part of a broader strategy widely viewed by scholars and other experts as exploiting stereotypes about crime and people of color
By Isaac Arnsdorf
August 2, 2024 at 5:00 a.m. EDT
Jaleel Stallings was just letting his dogs out and giving them breakfast a few days ago when he got a message from his lawyer telling him Donald Trumps campaign was targeting him online.
Here we go again, he recalled thinking.
Four years ago, Stallings and a group of friends joined protests in Minneapolis over the police murder of George Floyd. A SWAT team in an unmarked van fired a nonlethal projectile that hit Stallings in the chest, and Stallings, an Army veteran, returned fire from a legally permitted pistol. Officers beat him, breaking his eye socket, and gave accounts of the encounter that were inconsistent with video recordings. He was eventually acquitted of attempted murder of an officer and received a $1.5 million civil rights settlement from the city, while the officer who beat him pleaded guilty to assault but not before Stallings was vilified online.
Now, that stigma resurfaced in a post from an official Trump campaign account on the social media account X, which shows a mug shot of Stallings, who is Black, alongside a photo of Harris, who is Black and Indian American. The campaign accused Harris of raising money to bail Stallings out of jail because she promoted a bail fund that helped him. The post failed to mention that Stallings was acquitted.
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Aaron Schaffer contributed to this report.
By Isaac Arnsdorf
Isaac Arnsdorf is a national political reporter for The Washington Post who covers former president Donald Trump, the Make America Great Again political movement and the Republican Party. Twitter
https://x.com/iarnsdorf