Right-wing media figures are using an escalating political and humanitarian crisis in Haiti to defend former President Donald Trump’s racist comment that the country is a “shithole.”
When Trump made the remark in 2018, it was widely seen as one of the most explicitly anti-Black things he had said during his tenure to that point. Now, conservatives are again embracing it and retroactively claiming Trump’s racism — which he also directed at El Salvador and African countries — was justified.
On March 11, unelected Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry promised he would resign and leave office once a transitional council had been established, though the timeline for when that would happen remains unclear. Haiti currently does not have an elected president, national legislature, or any elected mayors, and a coalition of armed groups has now taken control of large swathes of territory across the country.
Much of Haiti’s current instability can be traced to a 2004 coup which removed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the country’s first elected president, from power, following his demand that France pay the island nation more than $21 billion in reparations for its colonial exploitation.
In 2022, in an interview with The New York Times, the former French ambassador to Haiti admitted “that France and the United States had effectively orchestrated ‘a coup’ against Mr. Aristide, and that his abrupt removal was ‘probably a bit about’ his call for reparations from France.” Haiti’s political system has never recovered from the ouster and has been dominated by a series of unelected leaders.
Rather than acknowledge the role the United States and France played in creating this crisis, right-wing conservatives have embraced Trump’s anti-Black racism.
On the March 11 edition of Fox & Friends, Fox’s Will Cain defended Trump’s “shithole” comment. “You’ll remember a few years ago President Trump called countries, several countries, s-hole — he called them, you know, not great places, and he used a bad term,” Cain said, adding, “You know, the truth is, Trump tells the truth. … When has Haiti ever been stable?”
Co-host Lawrence Jones called back to September 2021, when Haitian migrants were forced to set up a temporary camp under the international bridge at Del Rio, Texas. “They were already starting their own little gangs on the other side of the border,” Jones said, without providing any evidence.