She may be the first lady of the United States but that does not make her immune to racist barbs. While there have been calls for Michelle Obama to run for president in 2020, there have also been a slew of racist comments, mostly by Republicans, targeted at her.
The latest incident involved the director of a
nonprofit group and the mayor of a small West Virginia town who are under fire
after posting racist comments about Obama, calling her an “ape in heels.” Since
President Barack Obama first announced his bid for presidency in 2007, his wife
has been on the receiving end of multiple racist and sexist attacks.
Here are 5 instances Republicans compared the first lady,Michelle Obama to a primate. see details after cut.
1. Pamela Ramsey Taylor, the director of Clay County
Development Corp. near Charleston, wrote about Melania Trump becoming first
lady after Donald Trump won the election. On her Facebook page, Taylor said:
“It will be so refreshing to have a classy, beautiful, dignified First Lady
back in the White House. I’m tired of seeing a Ape in heels [sic].”
The post was picked up by local news stations which
also reported the town’s mayor, Beverly Whaling, replied to the post: “Just
made my day Pam.” Both women apologized for the remarks since but an online
petition calling for them to step down from their respective posts garnered
over 84,000 signatures. Taylor has since been removed from her post.
“My comment was not intended to be racist at all,”
Whaling told the Washington Post. “I was referring to my day being made for
change in the White House! I am truly sorry for any hard feeling this may have
caused! Those who know me know that I’m not of any way racist! Again, I would
like to apologize for this getting out of hand!”
2. In October this year, Dan Johnson, a GOP
candidate for Kentucky’s state legislature, posted pictures of President Obama
and the first lady with ape-like features. Johnson, a Lousiana bishop, also
captioned a picture of a baby chimpanzee as being a picture of the president
when he was a child.“It wasn’t meant to be racist. I can tell you that.
My history’s good there. I can see how people would be offended in that. I
wasn’t trying to offend anybody, but, I think Facebook’s entertaining,” he
reportedly said.Kentucky Republican Party Chairman Mac Brown was
quick to distance himself from Johnson’s comments, calling the posts
“outrageous” and added they “have no place in today’s political discourse.
3. West York, Pennsylvania, Mayor Charles Wasko was
under scrutiny in September this year for a June post in which he said a
picture of a monkey was actually a picture of Michelle Obama. He also captioned
a picture of a wagon of orangutans as “moving day at the White House.”
When local media reached out to Wasko about the
posts, he reportedly described the response to them as “b******t.” West York
Council President Shawn Mauck told CNN the mayor’s actions were “absolutely
deplorable.”
4. Patrick Rushing, mayor of Airway Heights,
Washington, was asked to stepped down for calling the first lady “Gorilla face”
on Facebook. “Gorilla face Michelle, can't disagree with that. The woman is not
attractive except to monkey man Barack. Check out them ears. LOL,” the mayor
posted in July, 2015.He refused to resign, saying: “I made a mistake. I
owned up to my mistake. If I do resign that’s admitting I’m a racist and I’m
not.”“It’s just playful back and forth banter that my
friends and I do,” he added.
5. In 2011, a GOP activist from South Carolina said
a gorilla which escaped from a zoo was Michelle Obama’s “ancestor.”Rusty DePass, also a former chairman of the state
election commission, commented on a Facebook post on the animal’s escape from
Columbia’s Riverbanks Zoo saying, “I’m sure it’s just one of Michelle’s
ancestors probably harmless.”
He admitted later he was referring to the first lady
and apologized for his comment: “I am as sorry as I can be if I offended
anyone. The comment was clearly in jest.”
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