The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s speech to Boy Scouts draws strong reactions

Political message upset some parents; others knew what to expect.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

As President Donald Trump prepared to address the Boy Scouts’ national jamboree, Atlanta mother Sherri Scott made sure her 15-yearold son went to listen.

“We told him we wanted him to stay and hear the speech because it’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y,” Scott said. She expected “a positive message about America,” about “doing the right thing and making the right choices.”

But Scott didn’t get what she’d anticipate­d.

When the president stepped to the podium on Monday, he asked an estimated crowd of 40,000 in West Virginia: “Who the hell wants to speak about politics when I’m in front of the Boy Scouts?”

Then Trump did just that — breaking 80 years of presidenti­al tradition by talking politics at the gathering. And he’s drawing criticism from some, and admiring acceptance from others, in the wake of it.

He called the Affordable Care Act “horrible,” told Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price to get the votes to replace Obamacare or “you’re fired,” and dinged former President Barack Obama for not attending the event.

Obama never came to the jamboree, which is held once every

four years, because of sincechang­ed policies barring gay Scouts and Scoutmaste­rs.

The Boy Scouts of America issued a statement distancing itself from the president’s remarks, reminding the public that every president is the honorary leader of the organizati­on and is invited to speak at the jamboree.

Scott, a charter organizati­on representa­tive with Grant Park Boy Scout Troop 150, said she was disappoint­ed Trump didn’t deliver the speech she expected for her son Spencer.

“All the presidents in the past have maintained that respect and civility for the office,” she told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Tuesday, making clear she wasn’t necessaril­y speaking for the troop. “It wasn’t very respectful to the Scouts and to the audience.”

Others thought the speech was just fine.

For Hank Brake, a singer-songwriter whose Eagle Scout attends Georgia Gwinnett College, the uproar is another example of the left overreacti­ng.

He said his son, Henry, who hopes to work for the FBI, loved the speech and was buoyed by Trump’s encouragem­ent and praise of the Boy Scouts. The president was never a Scout, but he boasted that many in his Cabinet were, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Vice President Mike Pence.

Brake said Trump could have skipped some of the political comments, such as the “you’re fired” remark to Price.

But Brake knew the speaker well enough to see some fire coming.

“People need to realize Trump is Trump. He’s going to open his mouth and put his foot in it,” Brake said. “The issue is whether he’s going to choke on it.”

Still others weren’t merely angry. They were enraged.

In an open letter to Boy Scouts Chief Executive Mike Surbaugh, a DeKalb County woman described herself as a “Proud Scout Mom” and said she was horrified by Trump’s remarks.

“To say I am merely disappoint­ed would be misguided,” the woman wrote in the letter, posted to her publicly visible Facebook page.

“To say I am angry would be a grievous understate­ment. I am livid to the point of being apoplectic.”

She and other parents said Boy Scout leaders, who didn’t require Scouts to attend the speech, should have done more to ensure the president steered clear of the divisive language of his campaign rallies.

The president did offer some more typical remarks, showering the Scouts with praise and emphasizin­g that success comes from hard work.

But the campaign-rally talk often took over, and at times the speech was more like a victory lap.

“We won Florida. We won South Carolina. We won North Carolina. We won Pennsylvan­ia,” the president reminded the Scouts, some of whom applauded and chanted, “USA! USA! USA!”

Scott, for her part, wondered whether Boy Scout leaders could have had a plan to somehow get the president back on track or cut his mic. She ultimately gave them a pass because they aren’t used to a president who doesn’t “act presidenti­al.”

Trump isn’t like his predecesso­rs.

Even Brake, who supports many of Trump’s policies and whose son was proudly in the front row, said it remains unclear whether the president “knows what the word tact is.”

“This is the world we live in,” Brake said, still satisfied to have a man like Trump leading it.

 ?? NYT ?? President Donald Trump greets the crowd Monday at the Boy Scouts’ 2017 national jamboree at the Summit Bechtel National Scout Reserve in Glen Jean, W.Va.
NYT President Donald Trump greets the crowd Monday at the Boy Scouts’ 2017 national jamboree at the Summit Bechtel National Scout Reserve in Glen Jean, W.Va.

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