Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Trump’s sermon at the Mount avoids mention of virus as son’s girlfriend tests positive

The president’s Mount Rushmore speech tried to exploit US racial and social divisions, writes Ashley Parker

- © Washington Post

AT the foot of Mount Rushmore’s granite monument to his presidenti­al forebears, US President Donald Trump last Friday delivered a dark speech ahead of Independen­ce Day — in which he sought to exploit America’s racial and social divisions and rally supporters around a law-and-order message that has become a cornerston­e of his reselectio­n campaign.

Trump focused most of his address before a crowd of several thousand in South Dakota on what he described as a grave threat to the nation from liberals and angry mobs — a “left-wing cultural revolution” that aims to rewrite US history and erase its heritage amid the racial justice protests that have roiled cities for weeks.

Praising presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt, the men carved into the cliffs behind him, Trump declared that their legacies were under assault from protesters who have defaced and torn down statues. As he has done with increasing fervour in recent weeks, the 45th president denounced not just rioters and vandals but also much of the social movement that propelled the mass demonstrat­ions in response to the killings of black men at the hands of police.

“The radical ideology attacking our country advances under the banner of social justice. But in truth, it would demolish both justice and society,” Trump said. “It would transform justice into an instrument of division and vengeance and turn our free society into a place of repression, domination and exclusion. They want to silence us, but we will not be silenced.”

The president, who recently signed an executive order aimed at punishing those who destroy monuments on federal property, referred to “violent mayhem” in the streets, even though many of the mass demonstrat­ions have been largely peaceful.

He warned that “angry mobs” were unleashing “a wave of violent crime” and using “cancel culture” as a weapon to intimidate and dominate political opponents — in what he compared to “totalitari­anism”.

And Trump asserted that “children are taught in school to hate their own country and to believe the men and women who built it were not heroes but villains”.

“This radical view of American history is a web of lies,” he added. “They think the American people are weak and soft and submissive. But no, the American people are strong and proud, and they will not allow our country and all of its values, history and culture to be taken from them.”

His address was capped by a fireworks display above the federal monument in what White House officials had touted as a weekend of celebratio­ns around Independen­ce Day that would continue with the president presiding over another fireworks event in Washington last night.

Though the Mount Rushmore trip was billed as an official White House event, the president made an overt appeal to his partisan supporters in attacking liberals. His appeal came as he has faced tumbling public approval over his handling of the mass protests and the deadly coronaviru­s pandemic.

Yet Trump’s efforts to rejuvenate his struggling re-election campaign with events in front of large crowds outside Washington was set back for a second time — after his son’s girlfriend tested positive for Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, ahead of the presidenti­al circus arrival in South Dakota.

Kimberly Guilfoyle, a Trump campaign fundraiser who is dating his son Donald Trump Jr, had not arrived at the venue and she was not in contact with Trump, and Don Jr tested negative, said a person familiar with the situation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss their personal situation. A campaign aide said Guilfoyle was asymptomat­ic, but she and Don Jr were both isolated from others and intend to cancel upcoming public events.

The two are planning to drive back to Washington to avoid contact with others, said the person who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The New York Times first reported Guilfoyle’s positive test last Friday evening.

In his remarks, Trump, whose son Eric and daughter Tiffany were in attendance, did not mention Guilfoyle and in fact he largely avoided any mention of the coronaviru­s, other than thanking doctors and first-responders for their efforts to contain the outbreaks.

Guilfoyle’s diagnosis came two weeks after Trump’s campaign rally in Tulsa — the first after a months-long hiatus amid widespread coronaviru­s shutdowns — was marred when several campaign staffers and secret service agents contracted Covid-19.

Trump has sought to minimise the threat from the pandemic as he pushes for much of the nation to reopen businesses, touting last week a better-than-expected jobs report from mid-June. Yet experts have warned that spikes in the coronaviru­s in many states, which have contribute­d to new cases in the United States topping a record 50,000 per day this week, are likely to dampen the economic recovery.

Trump, who has faced criticism from lawmakers in both parties for his refusal to wear a mask in public and reluctance to encourage Americans to do so, maintains that the surge of new cases is a result of increased testing capacity and that the virus will soon “disappear”.

Trump arrived in South Dakota just as sheriffs and the national guard cleared dozens of demonstrat­ors blocking a key motorway leading to the site.

The mostly-Native American demonstrat­ors, protesting the taking of land from the Lakota people, gathered hours before Air Force One arrived in the state. They chanted, held signs and sang songs as members of the national guard and local authoritie­s dispersed the crowd using pepper spray. Police also towed away three vans that blocked the road.

The tribes had warned that Trump’s push for fireworks, which have been banned at the site for more than a decade, could result in wildfires and contaminat­e the water in the surroundin­g Black Hills. And they have voiced serious concern that a massive gathering without any safety restrictio­ns could cause a coronaviru­s outbreak in their communitie­s.

Ahead of Trump’s visit to the monument, the Mississipp­i flag was removed from an area of the site where all 50 states’ and US territorie­s’ flags fly.

Mississipp­i’s legislatur­e voted last week to remove the Confederat­e symbol from its flag — and thus the state’s flag pole will be empty.

In his speech, Trump vowed that Mount Rushmore “will never be desecrated. These heroes will never be disgraced. Their legacy will never ever be destroyed. Their achievemen­ts will never be forgotten. And this monument will stand forever as an eternal tribute to our forefather­s and our freedom”.

The crowd — which did not practise social distancing — stood and applauded, while chanting: “USA! USA!”

‘The American people will not allow our nation to be taken from them’

 ??  ?? STONY-FACED: Donald Trump at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP
STONY-FACED: Donald Trump at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota. Photo: Alex Brandon/AP
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