New York Daily News

I’M THE REAL VICTIM

Trump forced to call out Nazis, slams ‘fake news’ Protesters jeer Donald on first N.Y. homecoming

- BY KERRY BURKE, NOAH GOLDBERG and GINGER ADAMS OTIS With Andy Mai

PLENTY OF fire and fury greeted President Trump along Fifth Ave. in Manhattan on Monday when he made his first visit home since he took office seven months ago.

Thousands of protesters rallied outside the iconic Trump Tower skyscraper where the President is staying, while another group nearby staged a mock “die-in” and funeral for American values before marching to the main event.

Trump touched down at JFK about 8:30 p.m. and then boarded a helicopter for a quick ride to lower Manhattan, where a car took him to his Fifth Ave. home.

A deafening chorus of “Shame! Shame! Shame!” rang out from protesters as the presidenti­al motorcade entered a white tent covering the 56th St. undergroun­d entrance to Trump’s building.

Chants of “Lock him up!” and “New York hates you!” followed.

The crowds waiting for Trump had gathered hours earlier, fueled by outrage over the weekend’s deadly violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., and the President’s initial refusal to condemn the white supremacis­ts involved.

An inflatable caricature of Trump as a big rat swayed above pedestrian­s near Grand Army Plaza on Fifth Ave. and 59th St.

A small group of roughly 16 pro-Trump supporters, penned in by police near the rat caricature, taunted demonstrat­ors by shouting “Make America white again” and waving flags. Demonstrat­ors also had to stay inside police pens in front of Trump Tower.

Sand-filled sanitation trucks were placed around the skyscraper as a barrier as cops shut down traffic on the busy avenue.

The crowd, which grew as night fell, swelled north to 59th St. and south to 54th St. Many held up yellow signs that said “Resign!”

Others brandished posters that said, “There is only one side on this, Mr. President,” a criticism of Trump’s poorly received remark on Saturday that the Charlottes­ville violence was an “egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides.”

Joel Graham, 59, who served in the Marines and is now a photograph­er, said Trump “let his cards slip” when he gave that speech.

“It’s disgracefu­l,” said Graham, adding support for Trump among the military isn’t as widespread as many think.

On Monday Trump made an effort at damage control by giving a harsher statement that clearly denounced the KKK and other hate groups.

“Racism is evil,” the President said, and added that white supremacis­ts who take part in violence are “criminals and thugs.”

But it wasn’t enough to pacify the thousands of angry New Yorkers who flooded Fifth Ave. — or to lift his sagging approval rating above 34%, down a point from last week. It’s a new low for Trump, according to a Gallup Poll released Monday. Emily Wells, 26, an elementary school teacher from Bayonne, N.J., said she was horrified by the death of Heather Heyer, the 32-year-old woman mowed down Saturday after a car crashed into demonstrat­ors who were protesting a white supremacy rally.

The driver of the car, James Fields, 20, of Ohio, has been charged with second-degree murder.

“We’re a disgrace in the eyes of the world, and now we’re killing people,” said Wells. “The Trump administra­tion was a disgrace from the start.”

Chants of “black lives matter” and “love, not hate — that’s what makes America great” grew louder as protesters from the “die-in” in front of the New York Public Library arrived at the night’s final destinatio­n.

A few blocks away, another protest formed at Columbus Circle, on its way to Trump Tower.

Benny Zable, 71, an Australian

performanc­e artist, said he didn’t buy what Trump was selling in his Monday statement.

“Everything he does is at the expense of immigrants and working class people,” Zable said. “He’s not speaking up against right-wingers in Charlottes­ville because they’re his voting base.”

The Australian also said he feared the ramped-up rhetoric between Trump and North Korea.

“What’s coming out of the President’s mouth is intimidati­ng. Not only is he putting the United States in danger, but the whole world,” Zable said.

Hawk Newsome, 40, president of Black Lives Matter in New York, said his group had just returned from Charlottes­ville.

“It’s important to come and show solidarity. One thing we saw in Virginia is that the alt-right is very united and organized. We have to organize to fight back effectivel­y,” Newsome said.

David Harold, 35, a security guard from the Bronx, said the weekend was “a new low” for the nation.

“I’m actually ashamed to be an American,” he said. “Our country is now led by a fascist, tyrannical racist, and those people in Charlottes­ville are the people who put him into office.”

By 11 p.m., the protests had mostly dispersed — and Trump took to Twitter to express his delight at being back in the city.

“Feels good to be home after seven months, but the White House is very special, there is no place like it . . . and the U.S. is really my home!” the President tweeted.

The NYPD said two men and a woman were arrested. They were charged with reckless endangerme­nt, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct, police said.

Iris Shamery, a senior from Jamaica, Queens, who runs a clothing store, said she’s given up hope that Trump can bring any dignity to the role of President.

“He should have been presidenti­al from day one,” she said. “But what he really needs is a baby-sitter.”

 ??  ?? Presidenti­al copter touches down at Wall St. heliport Monday night as protesters fill the streets outside Trump Tower (right) and gallery owner John Post Lee (below) unveils grotesque inflatable Trump rat.
Presidenti­al copter touches down at Wall St. heliport Monday night as protesters fill the streets outside Trump Tower (right) and gallery owner John Post Lee (below) unveils grotesque inflatable Trump rat.
 ??  ?? President Trump on Monday denounced racist hate groups – two full days after Virginia terror attack – then whined media “will never be satisfied” by what he says.
President Trump on Monday denounced racist hate groups – two full days after Virginia terror attack – then whined media “will never be satisfied” by what he says.
 ??  ?? Cops make presence known amid a sea of anti-Trump signs and chants on Fifth Ave. Below, a protester is arrested.
Cops make presence known amid a sea of anti-Trump signs and chants on Fifth Ave. Below, a protester is arrested.
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