Politics

Local GOP lawmaker pushes back on Trump’s attacks on Haitians in Charleroi, PA

Donald Trump falsely accused Haitian immigrants of eating pets in an Ohio town. Now, a Pennsylvania Republican lawmaker is calling out Trump’s comments about Charleroi’s immigrant community.

(AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File) Charleroi, pa
(AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

Donald Trump falsely accused Haitian immigrants of eating pets in an Ohio town. Now, a Pennsylvania Republican lawmaker is calling out Trump’s comments about Charleroi’s immigrant community.

A Pennsylvania Republican lawmaker is responding to Donald Trump’s racist attacks against Haitian immigrants in her Western Pennsylvania district. 

Last week, Trump incorrectly cited a statistic claiming that the Haitian population of Charleroi, a small borough of 4,000 people in Washington County, grew by more than 2,000%. 

“What a beautiful name, but it’s not so beautiful now,” Trump said in Tucson on Friday. 

“It has experienced a 2,000% increase in the population of Haitian migrants under Kamala Harris. So Pennsylvania, remember this when you go to vote. This is a small town and all of a sudden they got thousands of people.”

Trump’s remarks came days after he made racist comments about Haitian immigrants eating pets in Springfield, OH during the debate with Harris. That lie was originally spread in local Facebook groups and then platformed by neo-Nazis and fringe online extremists in August.

Charleroi is known for glass making, but according to the Mon Valley Independent, the attacks on Charleroi’s Haitian community comes at a time when the town is about to lose 300 jobs due to Anchor Hocking, the producer of Corelle, Pyrex and CorningWare, closing their plant at the end of the year.

State Sen. Camera Bartolotta (R-Washington) posted on Facebook pushing back against Trump’s comments over the weekend.

“This is a completely different scenario than other states where Biden was flying or bussing in illegals from Haiti or from other countries,” Bartolotta said.

“Many of the Haitians in Charleroi have been here for two or three years already. They escaped horrific events in Haiti, many having to travel/hide in the jungles for months or years.”

Bartolotta then added, “to try to disparage these hard-working people who have escaped atrocities and who are here LEGALLY to WORK , and pay taxes, and raise their children, and be part of the community, etc. breaks my heart.”

“For some of these people saying awful things about these Haitian immigrants, I’d ask them what it might’ve been like for their parents or grandparents or great grandparents who might have come from another country and spoken a different language.”

 

Keep The Keystone free for everyone

If you found this story useful, would you consider supporting The Keystone?

Every day, our team works to provide Pennsylvanians with free, fact-based reporting about the issues, policies, and decisions shaping life across the commonwealth. We believe everyone deserves access to trustworthy local news—not just those who can afford a subscription.

That's why you'll never hit a paywall here (though we may ask you to sign up for our newsletter). But keeping our journalism free depends on readers who believe informed communities are worth investing in.

If our reporting has helped you better understand what's happening in Pennsylvania, please consider making a donation today. Every contribution helps us continue reporting, informing, and serving communities across the state.

Patrick Berkery
Patrick Berkery Senior Newsletter Editor
Support our team