(Evan Vucci / TT NYHETSBYRÅN)

Analys: Liberalismen banade väg för trumpismen

Det var en sommar i liberalismens tecken när Donald Trump meddelade att han tänkte ställa upp i presidentvalet, skriver BBC:s korrespondent Nick Bryant. Den kontroversiella sydstatsflaggan hissades ner från offentliga byggnader efter ett högerextremt massmord i Charleston och landets högsta domstol meddelade att samkönade äktenskap skulle bli en nationell rättighet.

Men dessa viktiga händelser i liberalismens tecken fungerade samtidigt som en fröbädd för ”trumpismen”, skriver Bryant. Han skriver att en delförklaring till att många missade Trumps frammarsch var att händelserna sommaren 2015 missuppfattats, som efterlängtade och välkomna av alla.

Det som var liberala slutpunkter blev startskottet för en konservativ comeback, menar han. Bryant citerar Trump under kampanjen. Republikanen sa ”vi vinner inte längre” – och fick gehör.

bakgrund
 
Massmordet i Charleston
Wikipedia (en)
The Charleston church shooting (also known as the Charleston church massacre) was a mass shooting that took place at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in downtown Charleston, South Carolina, United States, on the evening of June 17, 2015. During a prayer service, nine people were killed by a gunman, including the senior pastor, state senator Clementa C. Pinckney; a tenth victim survived. The morning after the attack, police arrested a suspect, later identified as 21-year-old Dylann Roof, in Shelby, North Carolina. Roof later confessed that he committed the shooting in hopes of igniting a race war. The United States Department of Justice investigated whether the shooting was a hate crime or an act of domestic terrorism, eventually indicting Roof on 33 federal hate crime charges. Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church is one of the United States' oldest black churches and has long been a site for community organization around civil rights. Roof is to be indicted on federal hate crime charges, and has been charged with nine counts of murder by the State of South Carolina. If convicted, he could face a sentence of death or thirty years to life in prison. A website apparently published by Roof included a manifesto detailing his beliefs on race, as well as several photographs showing him posing with emblems associated with white supremacy. Roof's photos of the Confederate battle flag triggered debate on its modern display.
Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen