GOP Presidential Candidate Tries to Save Face After Asking “What’s a Uyghur?”
Miami Mayor Francis Suarez admitted he’s never heard of the Uyghur people or the Chinese government’s crimes against them—then tried to take it back.
Republican presidential candidate Francis Suarez is so qualified for the job, with such an extensive foreign policy repertoire, that he has simply never heard of a Uyghur before.
The Miami mayor declared his 2024 bid for president earlier this month, prompting nearly everyone to ask, “Who’s that?” And he only embarrassed himself further on Tuesday, during a radio interview with conservative talk show host Hugh Hewitt.
Hewitt asked the GOP candidate about his campaign’s stance on China’s human rights violations against the Uyghurs, a predominantly Muslim ethnic minority. China has built mass internment camps in the Xinjiang province, where most Uyghurs live, and more than a million Uyghurs (as well as other religious minorities) have been detained in the last few years. The United States has classified the mass persecution and targeting as genocide.
But Suarez seems to have no idea about any of it, or even about “what” a Uyghur is.
When asked about the Uyghurs during the radio show, Suarez was completely stumped. The exchange went like this:
Hewitt: Will you be talking about the Uyghurs in your campaign?
Suarez: The what?
Hewitt: The Uyghurs.
Suarez: What’s a Uyghur?
Hewitt: OK, we’ll come back to that. Let me, you won’t be, you’ve got to get smart on that.”
Later in the interview, Suarez said, “You gave me homework, Hugh. I’ll look at a—what’s it called, a weeble?”
“The Uyghurs,” Hewitt repeated yet again. “You really need to know about the Uyghurs, mayor.”
“Uyghurs, I’m a good learner, a fast learner,” Suarez responded, seemingly making a joke of it all.
The mayor later tried to do damage control, blaming the mishap on lack of familiarity with the pronunciation Hewitt used.
“Of course, I am well aware of the suffering of the Uyghurs in China. They are being enslaved because of their faith. China has a deplorable record on human rights, and all people of faith suffer there. I didn’t recognize the pronunciation my friend Hugh Hewitt used,” Suarez said in a statement.
Hewitt, of course, used the common English pronunciation of the word.
Again, none of this should be a surprise to a presidential candidate. Both of the last two presidential administrations have accused China of committing genocide and crimes against humanity against the Uyghurs. The Chinese government has been accused of physical and mental torture, mass sexual assault, mass sterilization, and mass detention with the goal of changing people’s identities and religious beliefs.