The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Trump sets aside difference­s, honors Bush

Trump declared a day of national mourning

- By Zeke Miller and Catherine Lucey

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA >> Donald Trump set aside difference­s in politics and temperamen­t Saturday to honor George H.W. Bush, the iconic American and former president a day after his death.

Trump declared a day of national mourning and ordered American flags to be flown at half-staff for 30 days to honor a man of “sound judgment, common sense and unflappabl­e leadership.” The president and first lady Melania Trump added that Bush had “inspired generation­s of his fellow Americans to public service.”

Bush, who was president from 1989 to 1993, was 94.

The quarter-century since Bush left office featured his Republican Party’s steady march away from his steely pragmatism and internatio­nal partnershi­p, culminatin­g in the dramatic break from long-held GOP principles ushered by Trump’s election.

While Trump spoke graciously, he has not always been so kind to Bush or his family. He ran against one of Bush’s sons, Jeb Bush, in the GOP presidenti­al primaries in 2016, and was sharply critical of the twoterm presidency of another, George W. Bush. He shattered the unwritten norms of the small fraternity of Oval Office occupants by keeping up criticism of the Bushes from the West Wing.

The White House announced Saturday that the Trumps would attend a state funeral for the former president at Washington’s National Cathedral.

The announceme­nt marked a reversal from earlier this year, when the president was pointedly not invited to the funeral of former first lady Barbara Bush, the family matriarch and the late president’s wife of 73 years. Melania Trump attended instead.

The Trumps were informed of Bush’s death late Friday while in Buenos Aires, Argentina, for the Group of 20 summit of rich and developing nations.

Trump said he spoke with former President George W. Bush and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to express his sympathies. He praised the elder Bush, who died Friday, as “a high-quality man who truly loved his family.”

Sitting alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel, he refused to answer whether he had any regrets over his past criticism of the Bushes. He did say that Bush’s death “really puts a damper” on his participat­ion at the summit.

In South America, Trump canceled a planned news conference, tweeting that “out of respect for the Bush Family and former President George H.W. Bush we will wait until after the funeral” to hold one.

Trump also announced that he has authorized the use of the iconic Boeing 747 presidenti­al aircraft, known as Air Force One whenever a president is on board, to transport Bush’s remains to Washington — a customary honor for a former president. Bush is to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda from Monday evening through Wednesday morning.

Trump also closed government offices Wednesday and designated it as a national day of mourning, which traditiona­lly occurs on the same day as the Washington component of a late president’s state funeral. He encouraged Americans to gather in places of worship “to pay homage” to Bush’s memory, adding, “I invite the people of the world who share our grief to join us in this solemn observance.”

The proclamati­on hails Bush as “one of America’s greatest points of light,” a reference to one of the former leader’s signature phrases about the impact of American civic culture.

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 ?? BARRY THUMMA— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H.W. Bush meet with members of the U.S. Committee on Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1984 in the White House Rose Garden in Washington.
BARRY THUMMA— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H.W. Bush meet with members of the U.S. Committee on Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n on Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1984 in the White House Rose Garden in Washington.

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