Imperial Valley Press

Baltimore-area district pushes back against Trump comments

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BALTIMORE (AP) — As Latoya Peoples painted a mural with high school-age students Monday in Baltimore, she was determined not to let President Donald Trump’s recent tweets about the city “sink in too much.”

Peoples was in Sandtown-Winchester, the West Baltimore neighborho­od where Freddie Gray grew up years before his death in police custody in 2015 prompted a racial uprising. Now Baltimore is in the spotlight again, this time because of the president’s recent attacks on Rep. Elijah Cummings, a powerful Trump critic who has represente­d Maryland in Congress for decades. Trump called the congressma­n’s district a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess” where “no human being would want to live.”

While parts of Maryland’s 7th Congressio­nal District have struggled with poverty and crime, it also includes more affluent areas and famous Baltimore landmarks such as Johns Hopkins University and its hospital, as well as the Social Security Administra­tion and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Elsewhere are cultural touchstone­s like the Baltimore Museum of Art and the worldclass Walters Art Museum.

The president’s comments have rocked Maryland’s largest city, and residents say their home bears no resemblanc­e to the place Trump described.

“People think you can’t walk through here. It’s intimidati­ng,” Peoples said of her district. “It’s nothing like that.”

The district is a study in contrasts, with long stretches of empty storefront­s and boarded-up homes, and trendy neighborho­ods dotted with manicured parks and restaurant­s. It also includes Pimlico Race Course, which is home to the Preakness Stakes, the second jewel of horse-racing’s annual Triple Crown.

Cummings’ district, which is nearly 53% black, stretches beyond Baltimore to include parts of Baltimore and Howard counties. The latter is routinely counted among the nation’s most affluent counties. The district’s median household income is $60,929, though there is a sizeable wealth gap between white and black residents.

Few residents will deny that Baltimore is struggling, particular­ly when it comes to violent crime and drugs. The city’s murder rate has soared in recent years, with Baltimore recording more than 300 homicides in 2018, most from gunfire. Residents say those struggles have compounded over the years, owing to institutio­nal segregatio­n and neglect by the federal government.

Nancy O. Greene, who has lived in Baltimore for 15 years, pointed to the thriving arts community in her neighborho­od of Charles Village and throughout the district. Green said she supports Cummings but complains about times when “money was needed and money wasn’t received” by district residents.

“You’re not going to keep Baltimore down,” she added. “Despite anything, people will come together to defend the city. It has a rich history from Edgar Allen Poe, F. Scott Fitzgerald — you name it . ... You can’t say this city doesn’t have a lot going for it.”

Other parts of the city are represente­d by two other Democratic lawmakers: Reps. John Sarbanes and Dutch Ruppersbur­ger. Statewide, Democrats outnumber Republican­s 2 to 1.

Earlier Monday, the Rev. Al Sharpton held a news conference at a West Baltimore church alongside former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele, a Republican.

 ?? AP PhoTo/JuLIo CorTez ?? A boy rides his bicycle on Monday after volunteeri­ng to paint a mural outside the New Song Community Church in the Sandtown section of Baltimore.
AP PhoTo/JuLIo CorTez A boy rides his bicycle on Monday after volunteeri­ng to paint a mural outside the New Song Community Church in the Sandtown section of Baltimore.

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