Lodi News-Sentinel

Feud between Trump, NFL players continues

- By Catherine Lucey and Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is indulging in his favorite kind of drama — personal, aggressive, culturally volatile and of his own making.

During a week in which a crucial Senate health care vote, his tax plan, the North Korean nuclear threat and Puerto Rico’s post-hurricane suffering vied for attention, Trump carried his feud with the NFL over players who kneel in protest into the new week with a fresh volley of tweets.

“The issue of kneeling has nothing to do with race. It is about respect for our Country, Flag and National Anthem. NFL must respect this!” he said in one of his Monday tweets.

But for some, Trump’s argument with profession­al athletes had everything to do with race.

Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., called Trump a “racial arsonist” and said he was using the manufactur­ed controvers­y to pander to his conservati­ve political base.

“He uses race to advance his own ends,” Jeffries told CNN.

NFL spokesman Joe Lockhart defended players’ rights to peacefully protest what they view as racial inequality and police mistreatme­nt of black males.

“Everyone should know, including the president, this is what real locker room talk is,” Lockhart said.

The acts of protest continued on Monday, as the Dallas Cowboys made a show of unity before their game against the Arizona Cardinals, but it wasn’t during the national anthem.

The Dallas players all kneeled with owner Jerry Jones and his family before a giant American flag was unfurled, drawing some boos from the Cardinals fans. They rose armin-arm just before the singing of the anthem.

Jones has been a staunch supporter of President Donald Trump and it was unclear if his team would protest during the anthem, as teams across the NFL did Sunday. The Cowboys kneeled near the 50-yard line.

The Cardinals gathered on the goal line as a team, some of them locking arms, during the anthem. Cardinals owner Michael Bidwell and his family and general manager Steve Keim joined them.

Public opinion is mixed on whether profession­al athletes should be required to stand for the national anthem as Trump would like, and there is a racial split in how Americans process the issue.

More than half of Americans, or 52 percent, said in a September 2016 Marist Poll that sports leagues should require their players to stand for the national anthem. While a majority of whites, 56 percent, said standing should be required, most Latino adults, 55 percent, and nearly half of African-Americans, 48 percent, said athletes should not be made to stand.

As the criticism rolled in, Trump supporters argued that he was expressing patriotism, not targeting AfricanAme­ricans.

“It’s a perfect example of where the president gets it right,” said Christophe­r Ruddy, the CEO of Newsmax and a longtime Trump friend. Ruddy said team officials and the news media are not in line with much of the country. “It’s a win for him at the end of the day.”

Trump tweeted about the issue anew Monday evening, rebutting a CNN report that White House chief of staff John Kelly was displeased with Trump’s criticism of the NFL. Trump referred to the network as “fake news” and tweeted that Kelly “totally agrees w/ my stance on NFL players and the fact that they should not be disrespect­ing our FLAG or GREAT COUNTRY!”

The NFL spat overshadow­ed the beginning of a week in which Trump was expected to flesh out the tax overhaul plan he wants to sign into law by year’s end, and perhaps help win over enough Senate Republican­s to pass the newest health care bill. Both are top legislativ­e priorities for him and his party.

During a political rally Friday in Huntsville, Ala., Trump said, “Wouldn’t you love to see one of these NFL owners when somebody disrespect­s our flag to say get that (expletive) off the field right now, out, he’s fired, he’s fired.”

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