National Post (National Edition)

Trump’s moves could have Olympic impact

American bid for 2024 Games seen as untenable

- SCOTT STINSON National Post sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/Scott_Stinson

To travel into the United States in the days following Donald Trump’s ban on visitors from seven Muslim countries is to be immediatel­y confronted by the faces of people it affects.

Airport restaurant server, snack shop cashier, hotel clerk: to pass through the service economy in this nation of immigrants is to be passed through a succession of people who evidently came to this country in search of a better life.

And, at the risk of employing an old columnist trope, my cab driver from the Houston airport came here from Somalia. He said he was scared. He had family planning to come, but not now. He said he didn’t want his name used. Fair enough. But the collateral damage of the new U.S. president’s ban isn’t limited, of course, to stories of individual­s who feel like the roots they were trying to put down were just severed by a spade. The impact on internatio­nal sport could be farreachin­g.

The United States is one of three countries bidding for the right to host the 2024 Olympics, with Los Angeles previously seen as a front-runner alongside Paris for those summer Games.

The host city is to be chosen by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee in September.

Given the timing, the Trump move has jeopardize­d the U.S. bid, if it hasn’t torpedoed it already.

At least one IOC member took to social media to denounce the ban, while various sports officials expressed confusion and uncertaint­y over what it might mean for a country trying to host an internatio­nal sporting event.

The logistics would, quite clearly, be problemati­c enough. As the evidence of the last few days has made clear, the new default U.S. position for visitors from countries such as Iran, Iraq and Yemen is to be denied entry. There are no exceptions for those previously residing in the States, or for those with properly secured visas, which is typically the instrument used for visiting athletes.

This has already raised questions for many internatio­nal competitor­s who live and train in the United States, in many cases because they attended U.S. schools on scholarshi­p.

Britain’s Mo Farah, a four-time Olympic medallist in distance running, was originally unsure if he could return to his home in Oregon since he was born in Somalia.

Although the spectacle of a U.S. bid that was, say, supported by Russia and other former communist states and was rejected by everyone else would be something to behold.

(It’s insignific­ant in light of the larger issues at play, but the loss of the U.S. bid in 2024 would increase the chances that Calgary could win the 2026 Olympics should it ultimately decide to enter the running.

The IOC would be much more likely to put those games in North America if the preceding Olympics is in Europe.)

Logistics aside, the Trump ban is also at odds with a pretty significan­t part of the Olympic spirit.

Whatever the IOC’s many flaws, and they are many, the Games themselves do manage to foster a sense of internatio­nal community unlike anything else.

Athletes from even the tiniest and poorest nations are represente­d, and there is always a story of someone who has overcome absurd challenges to make it to the Games to give those of us from wealthy nations pause.

In Rio de Janeiro’s Maracana Stadium last summer, the host Brazilian team undoubtedl­y received the loudest cheers during the endless parade of nations at the opening ceremony. But one of the longest other ovations also came for the little band of 10 athletes from places like Sudan, Congo and Syria — the Refugee Olympic Team, most of whose athletes could not enter the United States today.

Rami Amis, a Syrian refugee and Olympic swimmer, finished 40th in one event and 56th in another, but that wasn’t the point. “We are meeting with world champions and thinking that in this pool, world champions are going to be swimming, and us side by side with them, and it’s wonderful,” he said.

Togetherne­ss, inclusion, an overwhelmi­ng sense of welcoming. Or, more or less the opposite of the message that the new U.S. president is presently sending.

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