Albuquerque Journal

Trump to Liberty U graduates: Relish opportunit­y to be an ‘outsider’

No mention of Comey firing during speech at Christian school

- BY DARLENE SUPERVILLE

LYNCHBURG, Va. — Donald Trump, the real estate mogul-turnedpres­ident, offered simple words of advice to university graduates Saturday as he urged them to follow their conviction­s, prepare to face criticism and relish the opportunit­y to be an “outsider.”

“It’s the outsiders who change the world,” Trump declared in his first commenceme­nt address to more than 18,000 graduates of Liberty University, a Christian school whose president was one of Trump’s earliest and most outspoken supporters during last year’s presidenti­al campaign.

Trump kept to a largely upbeat message during the roughly 30-minute speech, never mentioning his decision this past week to remove James Comey as FBI director.

Drawing parallels to what was widely viewed as a longshot presidenti­al bid by Trump, who had never held elective office before winning the November election, Trump urged the graduates to never stop fighting for what they believe in.

“Remember this: Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy,” he said. Tens of thousands of people packed an on-campus stadium to welcome Trump, the second sitting president to address the university’s commenceme­nt ceremony, with applause and a standing ovation.

“Following your conviction­s means you must be willing to face criticism from those who lack the same courage to do what is right, and they know what is right, but they don’t have the courage or the guts or the stamina to take it and to do it,” said Trump, who did not wear a gown.

Trump advised the graduates to carry themselves with “dignity and pride.”

“Demand the best from yourself and be totally unafraid to challenge entrenched interests and failed power structures,” Trump said, in a dig at the Washington political establishm­ent. “Does that sound familiar, by the way?”

Trump also urged graduates to “treat the word ‘impossible’ as nothing more than motivation” and “relish the opportunit­y to be an outsider.”

“The more that a broken system tells you that you’re wrong, the more certain you should be that you must keep pushing ahead,” he said. “You must keep pushing forward.”

Trump suggested they choose careers they love “or you most likely won’t be very successful at it.”

Trump won an overwhelmi­ng 80 percent of the white evangelica­l vote during the election, and a recent Pew Research Center survey marking his first 100 days in office — a milestone reached on April 29 — found threefourt­hs of white evangelica­ls approved of his performanc­e as president. Just 39 percent of the general public held the same view.

Christian conservati­ves have been overjoyed by Trump’s appointmen­t of Justice Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, along with Trump’s choice of socially conservati­ve Cabinet members and other officials.

But they had a mixed response to an executive order on religious liberty Trump signed last week directing the IRS to ease up on enforcing a rarely enforced limit on partisan political activity by churches. Trump also promised “regulatory relief” for those who object on religious grounds to the birth control coverage requiremen­t in the Affordable Care Act health law.

Yet the order did not address one of the most pressing demands from religious conservati­ves: broad exemptions from recognizin­g same-sex marriage.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump gives the commenceme­nt address for the Class of 2017 at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., on Saturday.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump gives the commenceme­nt address for the Class of 2017 at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., on Saturday.

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