Dayton Daily News

Trump on Lewis: ‘He didn’t come to my inaugurati­on’

- By Maggie Haberman and Neil Vigdor

President Trump played down the accomplish­ments of Representa­tive John Lewis, the recently deceased civil rights icon, and criticized him for not attending the Trump inaugurati­on in an interview conducted while Lewis was lying in state at the Capitol.

The comments from Trump, which aired on “Axios on HBO” on Monday night, were unsurprisi­ng, given his penchant for grievance. But they were nonetheles­s stunning for the degree to which Mr. Trump refused to view Lewis’s life and legacy in terms beyond how it related to Trump himself.

“I never met John Lewis, actually,” Trump said. “He didn’t come to my inaugurati­on. He didn’t come to my State of the Union speeches, and that’s OK. That’s his right.”

When asked to reflect on Lewis’s contributi­ons to the civil rights movement, Mr. Trump instead talked up his own record.

“Again, nobody has done more for Black Americans than I have,” he said. “He should have come. I think he made a big mistake.”

Trump declined to say whether he found Lewis life story “impressive.” He seemed indifferen­t to renaming the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., after the congressma­n. The bridge, named after a former Confederat­e general, Grand Dragon in the Ku Klux Klan and senator, was the site of a turning point in the civil rights movement that became known as Bloody Sunday.

On that day, March 7, 1965, Lewis suffered a cracked skull during a march across the bridge when a state trooper clubbed him and beat him to the ground. The moment was a defining one in his life and in the civil rights movement. Trump, in the Axios interview, suggested there “were many others also” whose work should be praised.

Trump did not attend the events honoring Lewis at the Capitol last week, though Vice President Mike Pence visited to pay his respects, as did former Vice President Joe Biden, Trump’s presumptiv­e November opponent.

The president and the congressma­n were at odds since before Trump’s inaugurati­on, when Lewis questioned the legitimacy of Trump’s election and said he would not be in attendance when the president-elect traveled to the Capitol to be sworn in.

“I think the Russians participat­ed in helping this man get elected,” Lewis said in a television interview days before Mr. Trump took office. “And they helped destroy the candidacy of Hillary Clinton. I don’t plan to attend the inaugurati­on. It will be the first one that I miss since I’ve been in the Congress. You cannot be at home with something that you feel that is wrong, is not right.”

In the wide-ranging interview with Jonathan Swan of Axios, Trump repeatedly insisted he deserved praise for the country’s ability to detect the coronaviru­s through testing and dismissed criticism that he and his administra­tion should have done more to contain it. Remarking on the more than 150,000 deaths the virus has caused, he said: “It is what it is.”

“They are dying. That’s true,” Trump said in the interview, which was recorded on July 28.

“It is what it is. But that doesn’t mean we aren’t doing everything we can.”

Trump was also asked about his recent well wishes for Ghislaine Maxwell, the former girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein, who has been charged by federal officials with traffickin­g underage girls. Trump said he hoped nothing “bad” happened to her in prison.

“Her boyfriend died in jail and people are still trying to figure out how did it happen, was it suicide, was he killed?” Trump said. “I do wish her well. I’m not looking for anything bad for her.”

Attorney General William P. Barr has said Epstein definitely killed himself as he was being held in a Manhattan jail last year. But conspiracy theorists have continued to question the death.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN / AP / FILE ?? In this April 29, 2017, photo, the late Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., addresses protesters near a National Rifle Associatio­n convention in Atlanta.
DAVID GOLDMAN / AP / FILE In this April 29, 2017, photo, the late Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., addresses protesters near a National Rifle Associatio­n convention in Atlanta.

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