USA TODAY US Edition

Trump tweet about LeBron petty, mean-spirited

- Jeff Zillgitt

Since the 2016 election, President Donald Trump has had several opportunit­ies to fire back at LeBron James for something James said about him.

When James called Trump a “bum” and even when James said Trump doesn’t understand or care about the people, Trump said nothing. All the while, Trump bashed the NFL, some of its players and the NBA’s Warriors, calling Steph Curry out by name.

Trump left James alone — until Friday evening when he insulted the intelligen­ce of James and CNN’s Don Lemon in a tweet.

Trump wrote: “Lebron James was just interviewe­d by the dumbest man on television, Don Lemon. He made Lebron look smart, which isn’t easy to do. I like Mike!”

So why now? Joe Vardon, who covered James for Cleveland.com and covered Ohio politics before switching to sports, posits that Trump waited until James was no longer a full-time resident of Ohio, a swing state Trump needs to win in 2020.

Now that James is moving to California, a state Trump won’t win, the president felt it was OK to bash James in a tweet at 11:37 p.m. ET on a Friday. How that impacts the 2020 election, the people of Ohio will settle that. It seems like superficia­l play, if that’s why Trump attacked James with a third-grade insult that’s hardly clever or mature.

It was Trump’s version of telling a black basketball player to shut up and dribble. Trump’s tweet was petty, mean-spirited, not presidenti­al. It reeked of racism and bigotry. Keep in mind, Trump hasn’t said a word about NBA coaches Steve Kerr or Gregg Popovich, frequent critics of the president.

LeBron James is a lot of things but dumb is not one of them. He is smart, talented, thoughtful, kind, compassion­ate, empathetic, driven and funny. He has amassed a fortune — nearly half a billion dollars according to “Forbes” — not only through basketball but with endorsemen­ts and investment­s, and has created a philanthro­pic foundation.

It’s pathetic, but not unexpected, that Trump would mock James’ intelligen­ce at any time, but to do it the week James opened his new school for at-risk children takes a special kind of hubris.

Let’s see, the Donald J. Trump Foundation vs. the LeBron James Family Foundation.

One is under scrutiny for its practices that yielded a Pulitzer Prize for “Washington Post” reporter David Fahrenthol­d, who “found that many of Trump’s philanthro­pic claims over the years had been exaggerate­d and often were not truly charitable activities at all.” It is also being sued by the attorney general in New York for “improper and extensive political activity, repeated and willful self-dealing transactio­ns, and failure to follow basic fiduciary obligation­s or to implement even elementary corporate formalitie­s required by law.”

James’ foundation is not some flyby-night operation. Administra­tive roles are filled with education specialist­s at all levels, from elementary to college. It is changing lives of children, from the most basic to most profound ways.

Speaking of starting schools, Trump settled a fraud case involving Trump University in which he settled fraud cases in violation of New York state education laws for $25 million.

James was not born on third base thinking he hit a home run. James was born with two strikes and an ace firing fastballs, and he belted a grand slam. Yes, he had help from others, and James acknowledg­es that with humility and grace.

His foundation is centered around providing similar help to those who need it.

That’s why so many prefer that James not shut up and dribble.

 ?? PHIL LONG/AP ?? LeBron James opened the I Promise School last Monday in Akron, Ohio. The school is supported by the The LeBron James Family Foundation and is run by the Akron Public Schools.
PHIL LONG/AP LeBron James opened the I Promise School last Monday in Akron, Ohio. The school is supported by the The LeBron James Family Foundation and is run by the Akron Public Schools.
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