The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Trump odd man out as presidents assemble for Bush funeral

- By Catherine Lucey and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON >> There was no mistaking the odd man out.

Wednesday’s funeral service for former President George H.W. Bush served as a rare reunion of the remaining members of the presidents club, but the front-row banter among Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter and their spouses came to an uneasy end when President Donald Trump and wife Melania arrived.

The encounter was a realtime illustrati­on of the uneasy ties between the current occupant of the White House and his predecesso­rs, suggesting Trump as a member-in-name-only of the Oval Office fraternity. While the funeral ceremony itself was a warm celebratio­n of the late president, the relationsh­ips between the surviving presidents are considerab­ly cooler.

Trump gave the two Obamas a handshake before taking his seat in Washington’s National Cathedral without greeting the others. Hillary Clinton nodded at Melania Trump but then stared straight ahead.

The last of the five presidents to arrive was George W. Bush, who made a point to shake hands with all four couples — and appeared to share a moment of humor with Michelle Obama, slipping something into her hand. Bush then took his seat with the rest of the Bush family, across the aisle from the ex-presidents.

Some discomfort with Trump was perhaps to be expected.

Since his swearing-in, Trump has spurned most contact with his predecesso­rs — and they have snubbed him in return. But while the staid group of Oval Office occupants has been disrupted since Donald Trump’s election, the Bushes had made it known to the White House months ago that, despite difference­s in policy and temperamen­t, the late president wanted Trump to attend the national service.

The ceremony’s tributes at times stood as an unspoken counterpoi­nt to Trump’s leadership, as historian Jon Meacham eulogized Bush by recounting his life’s credo: “Tell the truth, don’t blame people, be strong, do your best, try hard, forgive, stay the course.” George W. Bush added of his father: “He could tease and needle, but not out of malice.”

The late Bush was the de facto chair of the modern incarnatio­n of the president’s club, transcendi­ng contentiou­s campaigns and party lines to bring together fractious personalit­ies who share that rarified experience.

Trump has sought to meet the elder Bush’s passing with grace, a contrast to the rhythms of much of his tumultuous presidency. He came to office after a campaign in which he harshly criticized his Democratic predecesso­rs and co-opted a Republican Party once dominated by the Bush family. Despite the traditiona­l kinship among presidents, Trump’s predecesso­rs have all made their discomfort known in different ways.

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