Toronto Star

Trump vows to defend ‘the American way of life,’

Trump rails against ‘radical left’ in speech to thinner-than-usual crowd

- LYNN BERRY AND AAMER MADHANI

WASHINGTON— On a day meant for unity and celebratio­n, U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to “safeguard our values” from enemies within — leftists, looters, agitators, he said — in a Fourth of July speech packed with all the grievances and combativen­ess of his political rallies.

Trump watched paratroope­rs float to the ground in a tribute to America, greeted his audience of front-line medical workers and others central in responding to the coronaviru­s pandemic, and opened up on those who “slander” him and disrespect the country’s past.

“We are now in the process of defeating the radical left, the anarchists, the agitators, the looters, and the people who, in many instances, have absolutely no clue what they are doing,” he said. “We will never allow an angry mob to tear down our statues, erase our history, indoctrina­te our children.

“And we will defend, protect and preserve (the) American way of life, which began in 1492 when Columbus discovered America.”

He did not mention the dead from the pandemic. Nearly 130,000 are known to have died from COVID-19 in the U.S.

Even as officials across the country pleaded with Americans to curb their enthusiasm for large Fourth of July crowds, Trump enticed the masses with a “special evening” of tribute and fireworks staged with new U.S. coronaviru­s infections on the rise.

But the crowds wandering the National Mall for the night’s air show and fireworks were strikingly thinner than the gathering for last year’s jammed celebratio­n on the Mall. Many who showed up wore masks, unlike those seated close together for Trump’s South Lawn event, and distancing was easy to do for those scattered across the sprawling space.

Trump did not hesitate to use the country’s birthday as an occasion to assail segments of the country that do not support him.

Outside the event but as close to it as they could get, Pat Lee of Upper Dublin, Penn., gathered with two friends, one of them a nurse from Fredericks­burg, Va., whose only head gear was a MAGA hat. “POTUS said it would go away,” Lee said of the pandemic, using an acronym for president of the United States. “Masks, I think, are like a hoax.” But she said she wore one inside the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel, where she stayed.

By the World War II Memorial, the National Park Service handed out packets of five white cloth masks to all who wanted them. People were not required to wear them.

Another nurse, Zippy Watt from Riverside, Calif., came to see the air show and fireworks with her husband and their two daughters, one of whom lives in Washington. They wore matching American flag face masks even when seated together on a park bench.

“We chose to wear a mask to protect ourselves and others,” Watt said. She said her family was divided on Trump but she is “more of a Trump supporter. Being from southern California I see socialist tendencies. I’m tired of paying taxes so others can stay home.”

Pat Lee made the trip from north of Philadelph­ia after seeing last year’s Mall celebratio­n on TV.

She said the protests over racial injustice that unfolded near her were so threatenin­g that people in her suburban neighbourh­ood took turns staying up all night and those who didn’t own guns stationed bats and shovels in their garages. Her friend from Pennsylvan­ia, who didn’t want to be identified, said she spent more than three hours in line to buy a gun.

“I want people to stop calling us racists,” Lee said. “We’re not racists. Just because you love your country, love the people in your country, doesn’t make you a racist.”

Trump’s guests on the South Lawn were doctors, nurses, law enforcemen­t officers and military members as well as officials from the administra­tion, said Judd Deere, deputy White House press secretary. He said the event was a tribute to the “tremendous courage and spirit” of front-line workers and the public in the pandemic.

In many parts of the country, authoritie­s discourage­d mass gatherings for the holiday after days that have seen COVID-19 cases grow at a rate not experience­d even during the deadliest phase of the pandemic in the spring.

In New York, once the epicenter, people were urged to avoid crowds and Nathan’s Famous July Fourth hot dog eating contest happened at an undisclose­d location without spectators on hand, in advance of the evening’s televised fireworks spectacula­r over the Empire State Building.

In Philadelph­ia, mask- and glove-wearing descendant­s of the signers of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce participat­ed in a virtual tapping of the famed Liberty Bell on Independen­ce Mall and people were asked to join from afar by clinking glasses, tapping pots or ringing bells.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump watch a flyover near the White House on Saturday in Washington.
TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump watch a flyover near the White House on Saturday in Washington.

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