Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Trump wants to uphold tradition of presidents and baseball

- By Jonathan Lemire

NEW YORK >> President Donald Trump’s plan to attend Game 5 of the World Series on Sunday will continue a rich tradition of intertwini­ng the American presidency with America’s pastime.

Franklin D. Roosevelt’s limousine drove onto to the field ahead of the 1933 World Series, the last time the nation’s capital hosted the Fall Classic. Congressio­nal hearings on the stock market collapse were postponed so senators could attend the game.

Harry S. Truman tossed out a first pitch from the stands of a regular season game in August 1945, just days after the end of World War II, giving Americans a sense that normalcy was returning after years of global conflict.

George W. Bush wore a bulletproo­f vest under his jacket when he threw a perfect strike from the Yankee Stadium mound during the 2001 World Series, not 10 miles from where the World Trade Center was attacked a month earlier.

Trump, who has yet to throw out a ceremonial first pitch since taking office, plans to arrive after the Washington Nationals and Houston Astros are underway and leave before the final out, in hopes of making his visit less disruptive to fans, according to Rob Manfred, baseball’s commission­er.

While it will be Trump’s first time attending a major league game as president, he has deep ties to the sport.

A longtime New York Yankees fan who was spotted regularly at games in the Bronx, he was also a high school player with enough talent that, he has said, he drew the attention of big-league scouts.

Presidenti­al attendance at baseball games has “become an institutio­n and a unifying influence in a nation that is losing both,” said Curt Smith, a former Bush speechwrit­er and author of “The Presidents and the Pastime.”

“It is part of the job descriptio­n, irrespecti­ve of whether the president is a Republican or a Democrat or a liberal or a conservati­ve. Bush found it a joy, he understood the symbolism of the moment. And he was the rule, not the exception,” Smith said.

Trump mentioned his World Series plan to reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday. But when asked whether he might throw out the first pitch, he said, “I don’t know. They’re going to have to dress me up in a lot of heavy armor,” apparently referring to a bulletproo­f vest. “I’ll look too heavy. I don’t like that.”

But the Nationals, who decide on ceremonial first pitches, made clear that the president was not asked to take the mound. That honor instead will go to a notable Trump critic, celebrity chef Jose Andres, whose humanitari­an work has been widely acclaimed.

Andres, a naturalize­d U.S. citizen from Spain, has been a longtime critic of the president’s views on immigrants and he halted plans to open a restaurant at the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel in downtown Washington. The Trump Organizati­on then sued Andres, who also denounced the administra­tion for failing to do enough to help the people of Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Maria in 2017.

There’s some suspense around how Trump might be greeted at the game.

Though the fans at the highpriced event are likely to skew more corporate than at a regular season Nationals contest, Trump is extremely unpopular in the city he now calls home. In the 2016 election, Trump won just 4 percent of the vote from the District of Columbia.

Trump’s White House staff has long tried to shield him from events where he might be loudly booed or heckled, and he rarely ventures out into the heavily Democratic city. (With the exception of his hotel, a Republican-friendly oasis a few blocks from the White House.)

“It’ll be loud for Trump but every president gets booed: both Bushes, Reagan, Nixon. When Americans pay for their ticket, most of them buy into the great American tradition to boo whomever they want,” says Smith. “He should embrace it: So what if the elites boo you? Think of how it plays with your voters elsewhere in the country, thinking ‘There they go again, booing our guy.’ Use it!”

Trump has long been a baseball fan, especially of his hometown Yankees. Before he became president, he would be spotted at games, sometimes along the firstbase line with then-Fox News host Bill O’Reilly.

 ?? FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Franklin D. Roosevelt prepares to throw out the ceremonial first pitch at Griffith Stadium in Washington before Game 3of the 1933 World Series, the last one in Washington before this year. Washington Senators manager Joe Cronin, third from right, and New York Giants manager Bill Terry, second from right, look on. The President uncorked an almost wild throw that sent the players scrambling.
FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Franklin D. Roosevelt prepares to throw out the ceremonial first pitch at Griffith Stadium in Washington before Game 3of the 1933 World Series, the last one in Washington before this year. Washington Senators manager Joe Cronin, third from right, and New York Giants manager Bill Terry, second from right, look on. The President uncorked an almost wild throw that sent the players scrambling.

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