Trump Tries to Use White South Africans as Cautionary Tale

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The president and his allies accuse South Africa of discriminating against and killing white people, and warn that it could happen in America if antiracism laws aren’t stopped.

A crowd of people stands near a large banner that reads, “Mr. Donald Trump.”
White South Africans rallying in support of President Trump outside the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, last month.Credit...Joao Silva/The New York Times

John Eligon

March 15, 2025, 2:50 a.m. ET

To hear President Trump and some of his closest supporters tell it, South Africa is a terrible place for white people. They face discrimination, are sidelined from jobs and live under the constant threat of violence or having their land stolen by a corrupt, Black-led government that has left the country in disarray.

The data tell a different story. Although white people make up 7 percent of the country’s population, they own at least half of South Africa’s land. Police statistics do not show that they are any more vulnerable to violent crime than other people. And white South Africans are far better off than Black people on virtually every marker of the economic scale.

Yet Mr. Trump and his allies have pushed their own narrative of South Africa to press an argument at home: If the United States doesn’t clamp down on attempts to promote diversity, America will become a hotbed of dysfunction and anti-white discrimination.

“It plays into the fears of white people in America and elsewhere: ‘We whites are threatened,’” Max du Preez, a white South African writer and historian, said of Mr. Trump’s description of his country.

But, Mr. du Preez added, white people have flourished since the end of apartheid in 1994.

Image

Visitors at isolation cell in an apartheid-era prison that is now a museum in Johannesburg last March.Credit...Joao Silva/The New York Times

The parallels between South Africa’s attempts to undo the injustices of apartheid and the long struggle in the United States to address slavery, Jim Crow laws and other forms of racial discrimination have become a common refrain among some Trump supporters.


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