The Palm Beach Post

Trump calls off parade, citing excessive costs

- By John Harney and Terrence Dopp

President blasts Washington, D.C., for its estimate to pay for the Veterans Day parade, calling it “ridiculous­ly high.”

President Donald Trump canceled his plans for a military parade in Washington this Veterans Day, accusing the capital city’s government of giving him a “ridiculous­ly high” cost figure, and said he may travel to a different celebratio­n in Paris instead.

“The local politician­s who run Washington, D.C. (poorly) know a windfall when they see it. When asked to give us a price for holding a great celebrator­y military parade, they wanted a number so ridiculous­ly high that I cancelled it,” Trump said Friday on Twitter. “Never let some- one hold you up!”

In a subsequent message, Trump said he may instead attend an already scheduled U.S. parade at Andrews Air Force Base on a different date, followed by a celebratio­n in Paris scheduled for Nov. 11 — the 100th anniversar­y of the end of the First World War in 1918.

He didn’t rule out a future event in the U.S. “Maybe we will do something next year in D.C. when the cost comes WAY DOWN. Now we can buy some more jet fighters!” he said.

Trump’s tweets came the day after a Pentagon spokesman said in a statement that a parade originally targeted for this coming Nov. 10 may be pushed off until 2019. “The Department of Defense and White House have been plan- ning a parade to honor Amer- ica’s military veterans and commemorat­e the centen- nial of World War I,” Col. Rob Manning, a Pentagon spokes- man, said in a brief statement.

The statement didn’t say why the event had been put off. Earlier Thursday, CNBC reported that the parade was expected to cost as much as $92 million, some $80 mil- lion more than originally esti- mated, according to officials it didn’t name.

The defense policy act that Trump signed into law at Fort Drum in Upstate New York this week authorized the parade. But lawmakers asked Defense Secretary Jim Mattis not to use equipment or personnel that might affect military operations or readiness.

Trump said in February that the march would prob- ably be held on Veterans Day in November and take a route along by of attended Trump military the Pennsylvan­ia pomp the was might and Bastille impressed flourishes when Avenue. Day he parade a guest of in French Paris last President year as Emmanuel Macron. He asked the Pentagon to come up with a plan for a similar event in Washington, initially suggesting it be held as part of the U.S.’s annual Independen­ce Day celebratio­n. “It was a tremendous day, and to a large extent because of what I witnessed, we may do something like that on July 4th in Washington down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue,” the president said last Septem- ber. “We’re going to have to try to top it, but we have a lot of planes going over and a lot of military might, and it was really a beautiful thing to see, and representa­tives from different wars and different uniforms.”

Trump told Fox News’ Jeanine Pirro in February, however, that he wanted the cost to be “reasonable.”

Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Senate’s second-ranking Democrat, said he wouldn’t attend the parade that Trump was planning.

“I believe that spending millions, if not more, on the president’s amusement is a colossal waste of funds that should be spent to make sure our troops are ready for battle, to come home safely, their families receive all the support they deserve, and that the waiting lines at VA facilities have been reduced,” Durbin said. “That’s how we can honor our veterans.”

And Senator Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., an Air Force veteran, told CNN that a parade would be “cheesy and shows weakness.”

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