The Niagara Falls Review

Trump lashes out again

U.S. president launches attacks on Twitter, says history and culture being ripped apart

- JULIE BYKOWICZ and JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump bitingly decried the rising movement to pull down monuments to Confederat­e icons Thursday, declaring the nation is seeing “the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart.”

Trump’s new remarks came even as the White House tried to manage his increasing isolation and the continued fallout from his combative comments on last weekend’s racially charged violence in Charlottes­ville, Va.

He also tore into fellow Republican­s who have criticized his statements on race and politics, fanning the controvers­y toward a full-fledged national conflagrat­ion.

Pressured by advisers, the president had taken a step back from the dispute on Monday, two days after he had enraged many by declining to single out the white supremacis­ts and neo-Nazis whose demonstrat­ion against the removal of a Robert E. Lee statute had led to violence and the death of a counter-protester in Charlottes­ville.

He returned to his combative stance on Tuesday — insisting anew that “both sides” were to blame. And then in a burst of tweets on Thursday he renewed his criticism of efforts to remove memorials and tributes to the Civil War Confederac­y.

“You can’t change history, but you can learn from it,” he tweeted. “Robert E. Lee. Stonewall Jackson — who’s next, Washington, Jefferson? So foolish ...

“Also the beauty that is being taken out of our cities, towns and parks will be greatly missed and never able to be comparably replaced!”

He wasn’t talking about beauty in earlier tweets, lashing at GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Jeff Flake of Arizona.

He accused “publicity-seeking” Graham of falsely stating his position on the demonstrat­ors, called Flake “toxic” and praised a Flake primary election opponent.

Graham said Wednesday that Trump “took a step backward by again suggesting there is moral equivalenc­y” between the marching white supremacis­ts and the people who had been demonstrat­ing against them. And Flake has been increasing­ly critical of Trump in recent weeks.

Another Republican senator who has sometimes been critical of Trump, Susan Collins of Maine, said Thursday, “The president should’ve spoken out far more strongly from the very beginning.”

Other Republican­s, including the most powerful in Congress, have been making strong statements on Charlottes­ville and racism, but few have been mentioning Trump himself.

The Senate’s top Republican, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, condemned “hate and bigotry.” House Speaker Paul Ryan charged that, “White supremacy is repulsive.” But neither criticized the president’s insistence that there were “very fine people on both sides” of the violent weekend clash in Virginia.

Few top Republican officehold­ers want to defend the president in the midst of an escalating political crisis, yet they are unwilling to declare all-out opposition to him and risk alienating his loyalists.

In another major sign of discontent within the Republican Party, Trump abruptly abolished two of his White House business councils Wednesday as corporate chiefs began resigning in protest of his racial statements.

The White House is trying to deal with the repercussi­ons from Trump’s defiant remarks on the Virginia tragedy. Advisers hunkered down, offering no public defence while privately expressing frustratio­n with his comments.

On Wednesday, he had told associates he was pleased with how his combative press conference had gone a day earlier, saying he believed he had effectivel­y stood up to the media, according to three people familiar with the conversati­ons who demanded anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about them.

Business leaders felt differentl­y. Denise Morrison, chief executive of Campbell Soup, declared she was leaving Trump’s manufactur­ing council, saying, “The president should have been — and still needs to be — unambiguou­s” in denouncing white supremacis­ts.

CEOs had begun tendering their resignatio­ns from White House panels after Trump’s initial comments following the Saturday violence. The first to step down, Kenneth Frazier of Merck, drew a Twitter tongue-lashing from the president. Later, Trump called those who were leaving “grandstand­ers” and insisted many others were eager to take their places.

Members of the Strategy and Policy group, led by Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman, concluded after a 45-minute conference call in the morning that they would end the council and announce their decision in a statement, according to two people familiar with the discussion­s. They insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

In a subsequent call with Trump, the president agreed it was the right course of action. He tweeted before they could announce the decision they’d reached — making it appear it was his choice.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump says the movement to remove Confederat­e monuments are ripping apart the “history and culture” of the U.S., and tore into fellow Republican­s who are taking a stand against racism.
EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. President Donald Trump says the movement to remove Confederat­e monuments are ripping apart the “history and culture” of the U.S., and tore into fellow Republican­s who are taking a stand against racism.

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