The Standard (St. Catharines)

Another strange style choice as U.S. first lady visits Texas shelters

Melania Trump offers ‘help to these children to reunite with their families’

- KATIE ROGERS

WASHINGTON — Melania Trump visited immigrant children in a Texas border town Thursday, and by the time the first lady left, she had made headlines for another reason.

As the temperatur­e climbed to 80 degrees at Joint Base Andrews near Washington, Trump boarded her plane wearing an olive green coat that read, in white capital letters, “I really don’t care. Do U?”

For the second time since her husband took office — and the second time on a trip to Texas — Trump had made an unusual choice. It was a move reminiscen­t of her decision last year to wear stilettos to a hurricane relief zone.

One common reaction to the jacket was bafflement: What was she thinking? No, really, what was she thinking? Trump is a former model with a keen understand­ing of her own image. She never makes an accidental fashion choice.

When asked about the choice — apparently a $39 jacket from the fast-fashion brand Zara — her office quickly responded.

“It’s a jacket,” Trump’s communicat­ions director, Stephanie Grisham, said Thursday in a statement to reporters.

“There was no hidden message. After today’s important visit to Texas, I hope this isn’t what the media is going to choose to focus on.”

During Trump’s 75-minute visit to the Upbring New Hope Children’s Shelter in McAllen, Texas, she met with dozens of children as well as the people who are educating them and supervisin­g their care. She asked officials questions about children’s well-being. She told the children to value friendship over all else.

“Good luck,” the first lady told them. The children applauded her as she left.

It was a striking re-emergence for Trump, who underwent a procedure in May to treat a benign kidney condition and spent several weeks out of the public eye. Her trip Thursday was a headfirst dive into the roiling debate over the Trump administra­tion’s hard-line approach to immigratio­n hours after her husband declared “we’ll send them the hell back” at a campaign rally.

She is the first member of the Trump family to visit the border with Mexico since a national debate broke out over the administra­tion’s separation policy. The outcry led the president to reverse course under political pressure and sign an executive order Wednesday to end the policy. More than 2,300 children have been separated from their parents, and thousands of families are likely to remain fractured.

“I’m here to learn about your facility,” Trump told a group of officials at the centre. She added that she wanted to offer “help to these children to reunite with their families as quickly as possible.”

The first lady interacted with dozens of the centre’s 55 children, visiting three classrooms, according to a small group of reporters who accompanie­d her on the trip.

Trump, who recently started Be Best, a platform centred on the betterment of children’s lives, asked her aides to organize the trip after seeing photograph­s and video of separated families, and hearing audio of children crying in the centres, Grisham said.

“She’s seen the images,” Grisham told reporters. “She’s heard the recordings. She was on top of the situation before any of that came out. She was concerned about it.”

Trump, who travelled to Texas with Alex Azar, the health and human services secretary, was also scheduled to visit the Ursula Border Patrol Processing Center, which had became a particular subject of scrutiny this week after a government video emerged showing families sitting in cages clutching

Mylar blankets. But her visit had to be cut short because of bad weather.

Trump asked about the condition of the children when they arrived: “So when the children come here, what kind of stage, you know, physical and the mental stage” are they in?

In recent days, according to her office, Trump was upset by news reports about families being separated at the border and helped persuade President Donald Trump to take action to stop it.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A ?? Melania Trump boards an Air Force plane before traveling to Texas to visit facilities that house and care for children taken from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border Thursday at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A Melania Trump boards an Air Force plane before traveling to Texas to visit facilities that house and care for children taken from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border Thursday at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland.

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