Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Much of nation scales back on holiday, but Trump is going big

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Officials across the country pleaded with Americans to curb their enthusiasm for large Fourth of July crowds Saturday even as President Donald Trump enticed the masses with a “special evening” of tribute and fireworks staged with new U.S. coronaviru­s infections on the rise.

Several hours before Trump’s “Salute for America” celebratio­n, people filed to the National Mall in baking heat and took shade under the scattered trees while, not far away, music wafted from a party on the White House South Lawn. To come: Trump’s speech from the White House grounds, a military air show and a more ambitious fireworks display than has been seen in years.

The early crowds were noticeably thinner than on the afternoon of last year’s jammed celebratio­n on the National Mall. Many who showed up wore masks.

But not Pat Lee, of Upper Dublin, Pa., or the two friends she came with, one a nurse from Fredericks­burg, Va., whose only head gear was a MAGA hat.

“POTUS said it would go away,” Lee said of the pandemic, using an acronym for president of the United States. “Masks, I think, are like a hoax.” But she said she wore one inside the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel, where she stayed.

By the World War II Memorial, the National Park Service handed out packets of five white cloth masks to all who wanted them. People were not required to wear them.

Another nurse, Zippy Watt from Riverside, Calif., came to see the air show and fireworks with her husband and their two daughters, one of whom lived in Washington. They wore matching American flag face masks even when seated together on a park bench.

“We chose to wear a mask to protect ourselves and others,” Watt said. She said her family was divided on Trump but she is “more of a Trump supporter” because of what she sees as socialist tendencies and high taxes in her state.

At the White House, several hundred invited guests assembled on the sweeping South Lawn, gathering around tables decorated with flowers and small U.S. flags as a military rock band played. Most guests were unmasked.

In many parts of the country, authoritie­s discourage­d mass gatherings for the holiday after days that have seen COVID-19 cases grow at a rate not experience­d even during the deadliest phase of the pandemic in the spring.

In New York, once the epicenter, people were urged to avoid crowds and Nathan’s Famous July Fourth hot dog eating contest happened at an undisclose­d location without spectators on hand, in advance of the evening’s televised fireworks spectacula­r over the Empire State Building.

In Philadelph­ia, mask- and glove-wearing descendant­s of the signers of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce participat­ed in a virtual tapping of the famed Liberty Bell on Independen­ce Mall and people were asked to join from afar by clinking glasses, tapping pots or ringing bells.

Yet Trump continued to crave big crowds when it came to his events.

He opened the holiday weekend by traveling to Mount Rushmore in South Dakota for a fireworks display Friday night near the mountain carvings of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. In stark words, he accused protesters who have pushed for racial justice of engaging in a “merciless campaign to wipe out our history.”

Even as he pushed ahead with celebratio­ns, the shadow of the coronaviru­s loomed closer to him. Kimberly Guilfoyle, a top fundraiser for the president and girlfriend of his eldest child, Donald Trump Jr., tested positive for the virus, Trump’s campaign said late Friday. Guilfoyle tweeted Saturday that she was looking forward to “a speedy recovery.“

In a presidenti­al message Saturday on the 244th anniversar­y of the adoption of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce,

Trump acknowledg­ed that “over the past months, the American spirit has undoubtedl­y been tested by many challenges.”

His Democratic rival, Joe Biden, said in a statement that the U.S. “never lived up” to its founding principle that “all men are created equal,“but today “we have a chance to rip the roots of systemic racism out of this country.”

Trump planned to use the speech to salute the U.S. military and pay tribute to American values, heroes and accomplish­ment, according to a Trump aide who was not authorized to comment by name. The aide added that Trump sought to use the speech to contrast his outlook with Biden’s remarks suggesting that America has not always lived up to its ideals.

Trump’s endorsemen­t of big gatherings at the National Mall and at Mount Rushmore came as many communitie­s decided to scrap fireworks, parades and other holiday traditions in hopes of avoiding yet more surges in infection.

Confirmed cases are climbing in 40 states, and the U.S. set another record Friday with 52,300 newly reported infections, according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

For the Mount Rushmore event, GOP Gov. Kristi Noem, a Trump ally, insisted social distancing wasn’t necessary and masks were optional. Trump spent little time in his Mount Rushmore address reflecting on pandemic, which has killed more than 129,000 Americans.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautions that mass gatherings like the one scheduled for Washington present a high risk for spread of the virus. Yet Surgeon General Jerome Adams sidesteppe­d when asked if he would caution a loved one against attending a large gathering. He said people should wear masks and otherwise make up their own mind.

Trump has been aching to see the nation return to normalcy, and has been willing to push the envelope farther than many states and big city mayors are willing to go.

District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser said she didn’t have the right to shut down the holiday spectacle because it’s on federal land. But she warned the federal government about the dangers of such a large crowd and told her constituen­ts: “Just because someone invites you to a party doesn’t mean you have to go.”

For Trump and the country, it was yet another holiday clouded by a pandemic that the U.S. has failed to bring under control.

In late March, a little more than a week after he bowed to the need to shut down much of the country, Trump spoke of reopening with “packed” churches by Easter Sunday. He relented on that push as his medical advisers warned that it was far too ambitious. Then he spent chunks of his Memorial Day weekend fuming about critics who he said were ignoring falling cases and deaths at the time.

With the Independen­ce Day holiday, he told Americans that the nation is “getting close to fighting our way” back. His rosy outlook was out of sync with officials in swaths of the South and West pulling back on reopening because of a surge of cases in their communitie­s.

 ?? Alex Brandon / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump smiles at Mount Rushmore National Memorial on Friday.
Alex Brandon / Associated Press President Donald Trump smiles at Mount Rushmore National Memorial on Friday.

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