Albany Times Union

Trump honors fallen soldiers in twin events

Visits Arlington, Baltimore amid COVID-19 crisis

- By Darlene Superville

President Donald Trump honored America’s fallen service members on Monday as he commemorat­ed Memorial Day in back-to-back appearance­s in the midst of the pandemic.

“Together we will vanquish the virus and America will rise from this crisis to new and even greater heights,” Trump said during a ceremony at Baltimore’s historic Fort Mchenry. “No obstacle, no challenge and no threat is a match for the sheer determinat­ion of the American people.”

Earlier, Trump silently honored the nation’s war dead at a ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery, which like Fort Mchenry is off limits to the public because of the pandemic. Presidents on Memorial Day typically lay a wreath and speak at the hallowed burial ground in Virginia. But the coronaviru­s crisis, soon to claim its 100,000th life in the U.S., made this year different.

Many attendees arrived wearing masks but removed them for the outdoor ceremony in front of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Trump, maskless as always in public, gave no remarks. He approached a wreath already in place, touching it and giving a salute.

Trump then traveled to Baltimore, to the chagrin of the city’s mayor, and noted that tens of thousands of service members and national guard personnel are “on the front lines of our war against this terrible virus.”

The U.S. leads the world with more than 1.6 million confirmed coronaviru­s cases and more than 97,000 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Trump said brave warriors from the nation’s past have shown that “in America, we are the captains of our own fate.”

The Fort Mchenry National Monument and Historic Shrine is where a poem, written after a huge American flag was hoisted to celebrate an important victory over the British during the War of 1812, became “The Star-spangled Banner.” The fort is closed to the public because of the pandemic.

Mayor Bernard C. “Jack” Young objected to Trump’s visit, saying it sends the wrong message about stay-at-home directives and the city cannot afford the added cost of hosting him when it is losing $20 million a month because of the pandemic.

But Trump is intent on accelerati­ng his schedule as he portrays the country as returning to its pre-pandemic ways. This month, Trump has toured factories in Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia and Michigan that make pandemic supplies. He plans to be in Florida on Wednesday to watch two NASA astronauts rocket into space, andheplaye­dgolfathis private club in Virginia on Saturday and Sunday.

Young, a Democrat, last week cited the disproport­ionate effect the virus has had on his city and called on Trump to “set a positive example” by not traveling during the holiday weekend. “That President Trump is deciding to pursue nonessenti­al travel sends the wrong message to our residents,” he said.

The White House sounded unmoved.

“The brave men and women who have preserved our freedoms for generation­s did not stay home and the president will not either as he honors their sacrifice by visiting such a historic landmark in our nation’s history,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in an emailed statement Sunday.

Trump last summer described a congressio­nal district that includes Baltimore as a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” where “no human being would want to live.”

He visited Baltimore months later to address a meeting of congressio­nal Republican­s, and a giant inflatable rat adorned with Trump-style hair and a red necktie taunted him from a few blocks away. Trump did not visit any Baltimore neighborho­ods.

He was visiting Monday more than a week after Maryland began to lift some of the restrictio­ns it had put in place for the coronaviru­s, though they remain in effect in Baltimore.

Baltimore and the Washington area have the nation’s highest percentage­s of positive cases, according to Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinato­r of the White House coronaviru­s task force.

 ?? Doug Mills / The New York Times ?? President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump on Monday participat­e in a Memorial Day Ceremony at Fort Mchenry National Monument and Historic Shrine in Baltimore.
Doug Mills / The New York Times President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump on Monday participat­e in a Memorial Day Ceremony at Fort Mchenry National Monument and Historic Shrine in Baltimore.

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