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Bernie Sanders calls President Trump a racist on Martin Luther King Day

Sen. Bernie Sanders
Andrew Harnik / AP
Sen. Bernie Sanders
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Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders had a dream of stopping “racist” President Trump’s vision to “Make America Great Again.”

“Today we say to Donald Trump — We are not going back to more bigotry, discrimination and division,” Sanders told a South Carolina audience at an event marking Martin Luther King Day.

“Instead of bringing us together as Americans, he has purposely and aggressively attempted to divide us up by the color of our skin, by our gender, by our nationality, by our religion and by our sexual orientation.”

Sanders made headlines shortly before the midterms when he laid into the President as “the most racist, sexist, homophobic, bigoted president in history.” He repeated part of that claim Monday.

“We, today, have a President who is a racist,” Sanders, 77, reportedly said.

Democrats old and young seem to have reached that conclusion. Freshman Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, 29, said earlier this month that calling the President a bigot is a no-brainer.

“Yeah, yeah, no question,” she said during a CBS “60 Minutes” interview after being asked that question. Among the examples she cited were Trump calling Nazi sympathizers in the 2017 Unite the Right ralley in Charlottesville, Va., riots “Good people.”

“The President certainly didn’t invent racism,” Ocasio-Cortez pointed out, “But he’s certainly given a voice to it and expanded it and created a platform for those things.”

Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a longtime civil right activist who was beaten in the 1965 protests in Selma, Ala., told ABC “This Week” that he, too, thought Trump was a bigot following the President’s alleged remarks indicating non-white nations were “sh—holes.”

“I think he is a racist,” Lewis said.

After spending last year’s Martin Luther King Day at his private Mar-a-Lago country club, the President placed a wreath before a King memorial in D.C. Monday, where he and Vice President Pence spent two minutes.

“Today, it was my great honor to visit the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial with Mike Pence,” he tweeted.

Trump has disputed accusations that he is a bigot on several occasions.

“I am the least racist person you have ever interviewed, that I can tell you,” he told reporters in January 2018.