The Hamilton Spectator

Trump visits Las Vegas shooting victims, calls them ‘Amazing people’

- CATHERINE LUCEY

LAS VEGAS — President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump met privately with victims of the Las Vegas shooting at a hospital, praising them and the doctors who treated them as he visited a city still reeling from the worst gun massacre in modern U.S. history. He invited them to come visit him at the White House.

Speaking Wednesday to reporters from the lobby of the University Medical Center lobby, Trump said he’d met “some of the most amazing people” and commended the doctors who’d worked to save them for doing an “indescriba­ble” job.

“It makes you very proud to be an American when you see the job that they’ve done,” he said.

Air Force One landed at the airport near the famed Las Vegas strip on a bright, sunny morning just days after a gunman on the 32nd floor of a hotel and casino opened fire on people at an outdoor country music festival below.

The Sunday night rampage killed at least 59 people and injured 527, some from gunfire and some from a chaotic escape.

“It’s a very sad thing. We are going to pay our respects and to see the police who have done really a fantastic job in a very short time,” Trump told reporters before departing the White House.

He said that authoritie­s were “learning a lot more” about the shooter, Stephen Craig Paddock, and that more details would be “announced at an appropriat­e time.”

“It’s a very, very sad day for me personally,” he said.

Trump’s first stop was the University Medical Center, where he met privately with victims of the Sunday night shooting rampage, their families, and medical profession­als. On his trip from the airport, the president’s motorcade drove past the Mandalay Bay hotel where the gunman fired down into the concert crowd.

The president also drove past his own Trump hotel.

Trump’s trip to Las Vegas follows his Tuesday travel to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico — a pair of back-to-back episodes that are testing his ability to unite and lift the nation in times of strife. Trump, a leader who excels at political provocatio­n and prides himself on commanding strength, has sometimes struggled to project empathy.

During Tuesday’s trip, he highlighte­d Puerto Rico’s relatively low death toll compared with “a real catastroph­e like Katrina,” when as many as 1,800 people died in 2005 as levees protecting New Orleans broke. He also pointed repeatedly to praise his administra­tion had received for its efforts, despite criticism on the island of a sluggish response.

Trump has a long personal connection to Las Vegas — a city where his name is written in huge golden letters atop his hotel. He also campaigned extensivel­y across Nevada during his presidenti­al campaign, drawing large crowds to rallies along the Las Vegas strip.

Trump told reporters Tuesday night that his trip would include spending time with “some of the folks that are recovering, some of the survivors,” and seemed emotional as he spoke about the human toll.

“We’re going to be seeing - ah it’s a very, it’s very, it’s a very - horrible thing, even to think about. Really horrible,” he said. “We’re also meeting with the police, the sheriff, and we’re going to spend quite a lot of time in Las Vegas.”

Trump was also joined on the trip by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Nevada Republican­s Rep. Mark Amodei and Sen. Dean Heller.

Trump offered sombre remarks about the shooting from the White House on Monday, saying “our unity cannot be shattered by evil, our bonds cannot be broken by violence.”

Republican­s who control Congress have made clear they have no intention of taking up gun control measures, such as tightening restrictio­ns on semi-automatic weapons and high-capacity magazines, in the shooting’s aftermath.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People pause at a memorial for the victims of a mass shooting in Las Vegas, Wednesday.
JOHN LOCHER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People pause at a memorial for the victims of a mass shooting in Las Vegas, Wednesday.

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