White House gamesmanship
By jumping into the fray of sports and politics, Trump once again is shattering tradition
Ever WASHINGTON since President Carter invited the Washington Bullets to the White House in 1978, presidents of both parties have used the White House to celebrate championship teams as the embodiment of American virtues of teamwork, determination and diversity.
But President Trump’s pronouncements over the weekend have called into question the future of that tradition as the event has become wrapped up in cultural wars over the national anthem, police violence and race.
First, Trump said NFL owners should fire any player who kneels in protest during the national anthem. “Get that son of a bitch off the field right now,” he said.
What followed was a weekend of non-stop coverage of nationalanthem protests.
Then Trump rescinded a White House invitation to the NBA champion Golden State Warriors after their star player Stephen Curry expressed ambivalence.
It follows a pattern of Trump breaking with presidential traditions — some substantive, others more ceremonial. In response to opposition, the president skipped the Kennedy Center Honors and the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. And he frequently injects political comments into non-political events like the Boy Scout Jamboree and other ceremonies honoring championship football teams.
To use the sports metaphors favored by presidents on these occasions, a championship team’s invitation to the White House should be a slam-dunk. They give a president an opportunity to appear presidential, to be a “winner by association.”
“These are important ceremonies, otherwise they wouldn’t be happening,” said Michael Hester of the University of West Georgia, who has studied presidential ceremonies. “They’re perfect for a president to use their office, to use their pulpit, to articulate national values.”
Presidents have invited sports teams to the White House since at least Andrew Johnson, according to the White House Historical Association. Johnson invited two amateur baseball teams — the first professional team was still four years away — in August 1865, just three months after the end of the Civil War.
Other teams were recognized sporadically, but it wasn’t until Jimmy Carter that the tradition began to take hold. President Reagan expanded and popularized the practice, with frequent references to The Gipper. Over time, Olympic medalists, collegiate teams and women’s sports have been recognized.
Regardless of president or party, the events have largely followed the same script. There are subtle differences: Republicans talk more about individual achievement, and Democrats talk more about teamwork, for example.
But Trump’s polarizing presidency has caused an increasing number of athletes to say they won’t attend the White House ceremonies.
“Going to the White House is considered a great honor for a championship team. Stephen Curry is hesitating, therefore invitation is withdrawn!” Trump tweeted Saturday.
LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers — perhaps Curry’s biggest on-court rival — defended Curry and called Trump a “bum” on Twitter. “Going to White House was a great honor until you showed up!” James wrote.
But White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Monday that Trump’s remarks were intended to be unifying, not divisive.
“This isn’t about the president being against anyone,” she said. “This is about the president and millions of Americans being for something; being for honoring our flag, honoring our national anthem, and honoring the men and women who fought to defend it.”
It’s unclear whether Trump has done any lasting damage to the role of the president as the sports-fan-in-chief. After he disinvited the Warriors, he made clear that the Pittsburgh Penguins were still invited.
The Stanley Cup champions confirmed they would accept, saying the Penguins “respect the institution of the Office of the President, and the long tradition of championship teams visiting the White House.”
“Any agreement or disagreement with a president’s politics, policies or agenda can be expressed in other ways,” the team said in a statement. “However, we very much respect the rights of other individuals and groups to express themselves as they see fit.”
But Hester said Trump’s sports rhetoric has already broken barriers.
“With Trump everything is personal. I can’t imagine a previous president disinviting someone,” he said. “He flips all of these traditional ways we think about using the presidency on their head. Just burn every political science book. Everything we’ve been teaching is wrong. This guy breaks all the rules.”
“When the president of the United States calls anyone a son of a bitch, that’s a story.”