Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Activists, politician­s plan to protest Trump’s Ireland visit

- By Siobhan O’Grady

WASHINGTON — When Barack Obama and Michelle Obama visited Ireland for a brief trip in 2011, the president and first lady were greeted with much fanfare.

The Obamas paid tribute to the president’s Irish heritage in the tiny village of Moneygall, home to Obama’s great-greatgreat grandfathe­r, Fulmouth Kearney, who immigrated to New York as a young man. They drank Guinness and greeted residents, including Obama’s eighth cousin, Henry Healy, who the Irish affectiona­tely nicknamed “Henry the 8th.” Later that day, speaking to a massive crowd in Dublin, the president told them “I’m Barack Obama, from the Moneygall Obamas. And I’ve come home to find the apostrophe that we lost somewhere along the way.”

Now, more than seven years later, the current occupant of the Oval Office has announced plans to visit the Emerald Isle.

The White House said last week that President Donald Trump will travel to Ireland in November, as well as to France, where he will he commemorat­e the 100th anniversar­y of the armistice that ended World War I. It will be Trump’s first visit to Ireland since taking office. Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar’s spokesman said that in Ireland, the two leaders will continue discussion of issues from an earlier meeting in Washington, which will cover topics “including migration, trade, climate change and human rights issues,” the Guardian reported. Not everyone in Ireland is thrilled about it.

Eamon Ryan, leader of Ireland’s Green Party, said that although he had certain concerns about the Obama administra­tion, including its use of armed drones in the Middle East, “It’s a quantum difference with the current administra­tion.”

In a statement, Ryan called for the Irish to organize protests. “We’re calling on Irish people to tell our Government to cancel this visit; and for them to demonstrat­e in never-before-seen numbers should they fail to do so,” he wrote on Twitter.

“I can’t sit back and let him opt out of the Paris climate agreement,” he said. “You have to protest. That isn’t just an American issue, that’s an issue for the whole world.”

The United States and Ireland have historical­ly had a close relationsh­ip.

Tens of millions of Americans claim Irish heritage, including John F. Kennedy, who famously visited Ireland as president in 1963.

Trump, as he has elsewhere in Europe, has proven a much more divisive force in Ireland.

Ireland’s Labour Party tweeted last week that Ireland is “an open and tolerant nation. Trump’s values are not our values, and there should be no welcome mat laid out for a man of his worldview.”

The tweet included a photo whose caption said “the invitation to Trump is unnecessar­y, unwelcome & unwise.”

Brendan Howlin, the Labour leader, tweeted that Trump “has been no friend of democracy or human rights.”

“We will always be firm friends of the American people, but Ireland will not welcome a man with Trump’s record of discrimina­tion, sexism and lies,” he said.

Trump, the businessma­n, has already stirred some controvers­y in Ireland. The Trump Organizati­on owns a golf course in the coastal town of Doonbeg in County Clare. Last year, the Trump Internatio­nal Golf Links Doonbeg got permission to build a wall around its course to protect it from the sea. Environmen­talists protested, saying it will be harmful to wildlife in the area.

Trump wouldn’t be the first U.S. president to receive a less than entirely warm welcome in Ireland. When George W. Bush visited in 2004, thousands of people turned out to protest him and the Iraq War. The year before, around 100,000 people protested the war on the streets of Dublin.

It’s impossible to predict

how big any Irish Trump protests in November will be. Ryan said it will likely depend largely on what kind of visit it turns out to be, including whether Trump is given the opportunit­y to address Ireland’s Parliament. But Ryan said he hopes pushback against the visit is “kind of clever.”

 ?? IRISH GOVERNMENT/GETTY 2011 ?? President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama enjoy a Guinness in Moneygall, Ireland.
IRISH GOVERNMENT/GETTY 2011 President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama enjoy a Guinness in Moneygall, Ireland.

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