Christopher Hale is executive director at Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good and the co-founder of Millennial.





The scandal over Melania Trump plagiarizing Michelle Obama in her speech to the Republican National Convention Monday isn’t just about plagiarism. It’s also about systemic racism in Donald Trump’s campaign.

Anyone who has worked on a political campaign knows that Melania, despite what she said, probably didn’t write that speech by herself. (A Trump campaign staffer took the blame.) Michelle Obama probably didn’t write hers by herself either. Both are campaign products, and each reveal to us something about the values behind the campaigns.

Those who argue that this plagiarism scandal is indicative of a campaign that has poor structure and little discipline are missing the bigger point: this act is the fruit of a movement that has used dog whistle politics and, at times, overt racism to win the Republican nomination.

The politics of exclusion were in full force at the convention Monday night as the party aroused the concerns of white Americans with three populations that they think threaten American security and prosperity: immigrants from Latin America, Muslim refugees from the Middle East and “militant” blacks in American cities.

At a panel discussion on MSNBC Monday, Representative Steve King, a Trump supporter, questioned whether nonwhite people had contributed much to society:

I’d ask you to go back through history and figure out, where are these contributions that have been made by these other categories of people that you’re talking about, where did any other subgroup of people contribute more to civilization?

As author Courtney Milan noted on Twitter: the very act of plagiarizing a black woman is “racism in action:” “It’s not just plagiarism. It’s plagiarism of a black woman in an election where surrogates say that nonwhite people have added nothing.”

The irony couldn’t be clearer: Trump’s campaign lifted language from Michelle Obama’s speech about the American Dream and shared values, while the GOP candidate has openly doubted that President Obama was truly American and has said that Obama is actively working to destroy our shared values.

Fusion writer Collier Meyerson puts it well: “this plagiarism goes far deeper into the belly of the America’s racist beast: the appropriation of black culture by whites.”

The writings, music, theater and dance of black Americans has always been a point of pride for the group who has always lived in America as second class citizens—and before that not even as citizens, but as chattel. The subversive power and spirit of black culture has been swallowed whole by the white mainstream time and time again, and almost always without the consent or acknowledgment that it’s being taken.

During the lifted portion of Melania’s speech, she said: “From a young age, my parents impressed on me the values that you work hard for what you want in life; that your word is your bond and you do what you say and keep your promise; that you treat people with respect. They taught and showed me values and morals in their daily life.”

If only Donald Trump and his campaign had learned the same lesson.