Herald on Sunday

● Trump: Protesters erasing values

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At the foot of Mount Rushmore on the eve of Independen­ce Day, President Donald Trump made a direct appeal to disaffecte­d white voters four months before Election Day.

His fiery speech accused protesters who have pushed for racial justice of engaging in a “merciless campaign to wipe out our history”.

The president dug further into American divisions yesterday, offering a discordant tone to an electorate battered by a pandemic and wounded by racial injustice following the high-profile killings of black people. He zeroed in on the desecratio­n by some protesters of monuments and statues across the country that honour those who have benefited from slavery, including some past presidents.

“This movement is openly attacking the legacies of every person on Mount Rushmore,” Trump said.

He lamented “cancel culture” and charged that some on the political left hope to “defame our heroes, erase our values and indoctrina­te our children”.

He said Americans should speak proudly of their heritage and should not have to apologise for its history.

“We will not be terrorised, we will not be demeaned and we will not be intimidate­d by bad, evil people,” Trump said. “It will not happen.”

The speech and fireworks at Mount Rushmore came against the backdrop of a pandemic that has killed more than 125,000 Americans. The president flew across the nation to gather a big crowd of supporters, most maskless and all flouting public health guidelines that recommend not gathering in large groups.

The discord was heightened as the Trump campaign confirmed during the president’s speech that Kimberly Guilfoyle, a top fundraiser for the campaign and girlfriend of Trump’s eldest son Donald Trump jnr, had tested positive for coronaviru­s while in South Dakota. Both Guilfoyle and Trump jnr, who serves as a top surrogate for the president, are isolating themselves and have cancelled public events, according to Sergio Gor, chief of staff to the Trump campaign’s finance committee.

During the speech, the president announced he was signing an executive order to establish the National Garden of American Heroes, a vast outdoor park that will feature the statues of the “greatest Americans to ever live”.

Amid the campaign headwinds, the president has sharpened his focus on his most ardent base of supporters as concern grows inside his campaign that his poll numbers in the battlegrou­nd states that will decide the 2020 election are slipping.

Trump in recent weeks has increasing­ly lashed out at “left-wing mobs”, used a racist epithet to refer to coronaviru­s and visited the nation’s southern border to spotlight progress on his 2016 campaign promise to build a US-Mexico border wall.

The event, while not a campaign rally, had the feel of one as the friendly crowd greeted Trump with chants of “Four more years!” and cheered as he and first lady Melania Trump took the stage.

“They think the American people are weak and soft and submissive,” Trump said. “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.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Donald Trump drew a large crowd to Mount Rushmore.
Photo / AP Donald Trump drew a large crowd to Mount Rushmore.

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