The Denver Post

POLITICS: It’s tough to be a D.C. tour guide these days

- By Steve Hendrix

WASHINGTON» It started, as it often does, when the D.C. NationTour­s bus passed the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue near the White House.

A many-accented murmur of curiosity was followed by a shouted question from a Peruvian visitor in the back.

“What do local people really think of him?”

“What do local people think of President Trump?” veteran D.C. tour guide Maricar Donato repeated evenly into her microphone on a hot July morning, instantly wary of any political discord that might ding a $7.5 billion tourism industry that brings 20 million annual visitors to the nation’s capital.

“He is too reactive,” called a man from Guatemala.

“Fifty percent of the people love him and fifty percent can’t stand him,” offered a tourist from Miami.

“Fifty-fifty,” repeated Donato, a Filipino immigrant, latching on to a compromise. “That is a good answer. He is our president, and we respect that. Now look at the Corinthian columns on the National Archives on your right ...”

The bus rolled on, the tourists sat back and Donato had once again deflected a tour-group tempest particular to Donald Trump-era touring: Sightseein­g devolving into slight slinging.

Some groups have erupted in boos when passing the Trumpembla­zoned hotel, while others have nearly emptied the souvenir carts of Make America Great Again caps. It falls to beleaguere­d tour guides to keep peace on the bus during a broil- ing, roiling tourist season.

“Most people are just here to see the iconic sights they’ve seen on TV,” said guide Steve Hillyard. “I try very hard to stay neutral.”

That didn’t work so well on a recent ride between memorials. One particular­ly assertive tourist — he won’t say whether the person was pro- or anti-Trump — pressed him on who should get the credit for the current state of the economy. Hillyard’s measured, just-the-facts, pleasenote-that-passing-statue-of-Alexander-Hamilton answer still managed to inflame the exchange and derail the tour.

“Things kind of fell apart,” Hillyard said. “I’ve usually been very good at redirectin­g, but that time I wasn’t able to continue with the substance of the tour.”

Presidents have always loomed large over tours, the guides say. “I had plenty of people ask me if (President Barack) Obama was a Muslim,” said Donato.

But as with many things, the tensions are heightened in the Trump era. Many are worried that foreign visitors in particular are being turned off — even turned away — by a trash-talking, tariff-loving commander in chief. And a strong dollar hasn’t helped, making the country harder to afford for many foreigners.

“My tours are getting smaller and smaller,” said Dutch-speaking guide Ruth Roberts, whose typical groups of 30 or so have shrunk to about 17 this summer. Three of her fall groups from Europe have canceled as well. “The feeling has soured tremendous­ly.”

While hard numbers won’t be available for months, tour operators are reporting a drop in visits from countries Trump has targeted on trade, immigratio­n and the travel ban. Tourism analysts worry the protracted legal battle over the travel ban has tarnished the United States’ reputation as a welcoming nation.

“The legal purgatory we’ve just endured was tantamount to a PR hell,” said Jonathan Grella, vice president of public affairs for the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, an industry nonprofit that seeks to increase travel to and within the United States. “We need the White House now to focus on a deliberate and explicit message of welcome to legitimate travelers.”

And those who do come are closer than usual to becoming embroiled in the churning domestic dispute between the president’s backers and haters.

Jackie Frend, the president of the Guild of Profession­al Tour Guides of Washington, noticed this spring that some of the venerable 8th-grade school visits to the District of Columbia were skipping a once-sacrosanct stop: the White House.

“Some of them they just don’t want to see it,” said Frend, whose group includes more than 50 guides speaking 20 languages. “I ask the teachers why it’s not on the itinerary, and they just shrug.”

Meanwhile, conservati­ve tourists are coming to the nation’s capital in greater numbers, according to several tour operators, drawn both by their support for the president and the opening of the popular Museum of the Bible a block from the National Mall. Among them are more school groups from proTrump red states in the South and Midwest.

“We’ve got kids in red hats riding the same bus with kids from liberal states like California,” said Lance Harvey the founder of School Tours for America, a major organizer of student trips to the city. He gave his guides extra training in the spring so they were ready to broker any political spitball fights.

 ?? Photos by Astrid Riecken, Special to The Washington Post ?? Maricar Donato carries a stars and stripes umbrella at the WWII Memorial in July.
Photos by Astrid Riecken, Special to The Washington Post Maricar Donato carries a stars and stripes umbrella at the WWII Memorial in July.
 ??  ?? Donato, a tour guide with DC Nation Tours, talks to visitors inside a tour bus.
Donato, a tour guide with DC Nation Tours, talks to visitors inside a tour bus.

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