WH Blames Eagles For ‘Political Stunt’ Even Though Trump Cancelled Visit
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Tuesday accused the Philadelphia Eagles of pulling a “political stunt” by opting in large numbers not to attend a celebration of their Super Bowl victory at the White House, even though it was President Donald Trump who rescinded the team’s invitation.
“There were 80 members of the Eagles organization that RSVP’d and committed to attend this event as recently as Friday,” she told reporters at a press briefing Tuesday. She didn’t specify how many in that group were players, rather than coaches, management and support staff.
Gone was one of Trump’s stated reasons for rescinding the Eagles’ invite: That “[t]hey disagree with their President because he insists that they proudly stand for the National Anthem, hand on heart, in honor of the great men and women of our military and the people of our country.”
Perhaps that’s because it wasn’t true: No Eagles players knelt during the national anthem this past season.
“The Eagles are the ones that tried to change their commitment at the 11th hour and the President frankly thinks that the fans deserve better than that and, therefore, we changed the ceremony to be a focus on celebrating our great country,” Sanders added.
She said later: “If this wasn’t a political stunt by the Eagles franchise, then they wouldn’t have planned to attend the event and then backed out at the last minute. And if it wasn’t a political stunt, then they wouldn’t have attempted to reschedule the visit when they knew that the President was going to be overseas. And if this wasn’t a political stunt, then they wouldn’t have waited until Monday, well after a thousand of their fans had traveled and taken time out of their schedules, to offer only a tiny handful of representatives to attend the event.”
It’s not clear when certain Eagles players (as well as coaches, management and support staff) decided not to attend the White House event. Multiple players said publicly months ago that they wouldn’t attend. And at least two players disputed that players waited until the last minute to bail on the visit.
“No one refused to go simply because Trump ‘insists’ folks stand for the anthem,” said former Eagles wide receiver Torrey Smith on Monday, seemingly referring to the NFL’s May 23 announcement that NFL franchises would be fined if players kneeled during the anthem.
“Most players (and there were many players, many players…) that wanted to opt out had decided long b4 the anthem rule came down,” Eagle Chris Long saidTuesday.
“Are you saying the President bears zero responsibility in this cancellation?” one reporter asked Sanders later on Tuesday. “This is a President who called NFL players ‘SOBs,’ who implied that some players that don’t stand for the national anthem do not belong in this country.”
In short, no: “They made that change at the last minute, not the President. He’s the one that has been completely consistent in his viewpoint when it comes to this,” Sanders said.
Except that’s not true: Trump cancelled the gathering.
Scaramucci On Trump Lies: ‘There’s Different Styles Of Communication’
Former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci argued Tuesday that President Donald Trump doesn’t lie, he just has a “different style of communication.”
In a rambling exchange with the former Trump administration official, CNN’s Chris Cuomo asked about President Donald Trump’s false claim — lie — that he had disinvited the Philadelphia Eagles from attending a Super Bowl victory celebration at the White House Tuesday because they had disrespected the national anthem.
In reality, no Eagles players knelt during the anthem last season. Rather, a large number of players on the team were planning on skipping the event.
“I care about whether he tells the truth to the American people on the matters that are important,” Cuomo told Scaramucci, saying his coverage of Trump wasn’t psychologically examining the President, but rather holding him accountable.
“You’re like everybody else now in the media,” Scaramucci said, mimicking members of the media: “‘Oh, the President’s a liar. The President’s a liar.’”
“When you lie, why shouldn’t you be called a liar?” Cuomo asked.
“Because there’s different styles of communication,” Scaramucci said.
“Lying,” Cuomo objected, “is not a style of communication.”
“There’s different styles of communication,” Scaramucci repeated. “Sixty-three and a half million people voted for him because they get the gist of what he’s talking about.”
White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Tuesday accused the football team of pulling a “political stunt” after, according to her, many players and Eagles staff waited until the last minute to tell the White House they wouldn’t be attending the event. But plenty of Eagles players said months ago that they wouldn’t be attending, and it was Trump himself who cancelled the event at the last minute, not the Eagles.
Elsewhere in the interview, Scaramucci called athletes a “cultural totem for our society” who were “tied into our military” and have a responsibility to respect the national anthem.
After Cuomo played footage of Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James saying that neither his team nor the Golden State Warriors would attend a White House reception with Trump, Scaramucci said Trump had once had “great relationships with the rap community” and “great relationships with NFL athletes and African American athletes.”
White House ceremony would be troublesome for Devante Smith-Pelly, with Capitals closing in on Stanley Cup
The Capitals have yet to wrap up their first championship, but already the question has arisen because of the cancellation of the Eagles' visit this week
LAS VEGAS — Devante Smith-Pelly didn’t want to jinx it.
They haven’t accomplished anything. They still needed one more win. So there was no point in talking about celebrations, parades or anything of that nature.
At the same time, he wanted to make one thing crystal clear: if the Washington Capitals, who have a 3-1 series lead on the Vegas Golden Knights, were to win the Stanley Cup in Game 5 on Thursday there is no way he would visit the White House.
Not as long as Donald Trump is still the president.
“The things that he spews are straight-up racist and sexist,” Smith-Pelly, who was born in Scarborough, in Toronto’s east end, said of Trump in an interview with Postmedia. “Some of the things he’s said are pretty gross. I’m not too into politics, so I don’t know all his other views, but his rhetoric I definitely don’t agree with.
“It hasn’t come up here, but I think I already have my mind made up.”
On Monday, Trump cancelled the Philadelphia Eagles’ visit to the White House meant to celebrate their Super Bowl victory in February. Few members of the team planned to attend. Trump claimed in an official statement that he cancelled the event because, “They disagree with their president because he insists that they proudly stand for the national anthem.” No Eagles players had knelt in protest on the field during the past season.
A day later, Cleveland’s LeBron James and Golden State’s Steph Curry both said they would not be visiting if either the Cavaliers or Warriors win the NBA championship. Trump had also disinvited the Warriors from visiting last year after a number of players said they had no intention of going.
“I’m not surprised. It’s typical of him,” James told reporters of Trump’s decision to cancel the Eagles’ invite. “I know no matter who wins this series, no one wants the invite anyway. So it won’t be Golden State or Cleveland going.”
Hockey is a bit different. It’s rare for players to deviate from the team and take personal stands.
Goaltender Tim Thomas made headlines in 2011 when he refused to attend the White House ceremony for the champion Boston Bruins because “the federal government has grown out of control, threatening the rights, liberties, and property of the people.”
“Things that he’s saying about immigrants and people of colour, I don’t think anyone here would agree with that,” said Smith-Pelly, who was the target of racial abuse in a game in Chicago in February. “We’ve got a lot of Europeans and a lot of Canadians.”
New Poll: Most Americans Don’t Think Taking a Knee During National Anthem is Unpatriotic
The majority of Americans don’t think that players taking a knee during the national anthem is unpatriotic, according to a just-released Quinnipiac poll.
According to the June 7 report, 58 percent of American voters say that the players choosing to protest are not being unpatriotic.
In addition, the majority of American voters, 53 percent, say that professional athletes have the “right to protest on the playing field or court.”
A narrow majority, 51 percent, also think that the NFL should not fine kneelers.
Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll, summarized the findings as follows:
“Voters are clearly torn on the National Anthem issue. They seem to be saying, ‘You can
still love your country and kneel during its Anthem,’ but the NFL’s new ‘must stand’ mandate is fine with them, too. As for teams that defy the new rule, Americans say, ‘Don’t throw a flag on them.’”
The findings take on special significance since earlier this week, President Donald Trump canceled a planned White House celebration with the Super Bowl-winning Philadelphia Eagles and decided to hold a Patriotic celebration instead, calling out kneeling as “disrespectful.” (Fact check: The Eagles actually stood at each and every game).
The kneeling results may also shed a bit of insight into another finding from Quinnipiac which found most American voters, 61 percent, don’t approve of how Trump is handling race relations in general.
That is, except for Republicans, who think Trump is doing just fine when it comes to race.
That said, deep divisions exist based on party and racial lines.
For example, Democrats support the right to protest via an 82-16 margin. Republicans say there is no right to protest, by a nearly identical split of 81-16.
African-American voters support the right to protest, 85-11. Hispanic voters agree, with a 67-28 margin. White voters believe players don’t have the right to protest, via a narrower gap of 53-43.
And while all American voters support the NFL’s new anthem policy (51-42), all American voters oppose fining teams if players on the field fail to stand for the anthem, by a 51-44 margin.
Black firefighter takes heat after taking knee at police-fire football game
A political and emotional brush fire is smoldering within a grieving Chicago Fire Department over a national anthem protest that marred a charity football game dedicated to the memory of two fallen Chicago heroes.
Camron McGarity, an African-American firefighter, kneeled while the Star Spangled Banner was being played before the CFD Blaze faced off against the Chicago Police Department’s Enforcers last Saturday in the eighth annual “First Responders Bowl.”
A photo of the protest clearly shows the firefighter, wearing the No. 7 jersey, kneeling on the sidelines while players on either side stood at attention dressed in bright red jerseys and matching red pants.
Fired Chicago Police Superintendent-turned-mayoral-challenger Garry McCarthy, who was at the game at Brother Rice High School on the Southwest Side, said the solo protest generated plenty of “grumbling” among the crowd of roughly 1,000, in part, because the game was dedicated to the memory of slain 18th District Commander Paul Bauer and former dive team member Juan Bucio, who died during a Memorial Day rescue on the Chicago River.
Sources said teammates found McGarity’s protest so disrespectful to the families of Bauer and Bucio, there’s been internal talk about kicking him off the team next season.
But that’s apparently as far as the punishment will go.
Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago, a retired Marine, has no plan to discipline or even reprimand McGarity, who couldn’t be reached for comment.
“It appears the member is expressing his First Amendment right to demonstrate,” Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford wrote in a text message to the Sun-Times.
McCarthy said that’s probably the right call.
“During the [2012] NATO Summit, I talked about the fact that I would protect peoples’ First Amendment right to free speech, whether I agreed with them or not. And it’s really the same thing here,” said McCarthy, who played in the game when he was the city’s top cop. “As an American and as the son of a World War II veteran who was injured on Mount Suribachi –– that iconic [Iwo Jima] photo that everybody in the world is aware of — I was raised with incredible reverence for this country and the flag. Having said that, while I may disagree personally with anybody who engages in some sort of behavior like that, I still respect the right to free speech.”
McCarthy said he considered McGarity’s protest “inappropriate behavior” because it distracted from “what the game was all about. . . . The game was played in honor of Bucio and Paul Bauer.”
The former superintendent hesitated when asked whether he would have disciplined or even reprimanded a police officer under his command who did what McGarity did.
“I don’t know. That’s a tough question. It’s a very sensitive subject. And there’s two sides to it. It’s a tough line to walk,” he said.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel had no immediate comment about McGarity.
The situation mirrors the national controversy touched off by NFL players kneeling during the national anthem, the tweet storm it triggered from President Donald Trump and the more recent decision by NFL owners to compel players to stand on the field when the anthem is played or face stiff fines.
Judy Austerd was so outraged by the protest, she sent a photo of McGarity kneeling on the sidelines to the Sun-Times.
“I, like many who have also seen it, am angry, disappointed and embarrassed,” she wrote in an email. “Do the coaches/managers and players on this team believe that this manner of disrespect to the families of Bauer and Bucio is tolerable? . . . Is this not what is known as ‘conduct unbecoming a sworn member?’
“Exactly what are you protesting, seeing that you have what I’ve heard referred as a dream job that is treasured by many and hoped for by many more,” Austerd also wrote. “Other than afford you the honor and privilege to serve alongside some of the most noble men and women that this city has to offer, how have you been mistreated?”
Last fall, the Chicago Police Department reprimanded two uniformed African-American officers photographed “taking a knee” with their fists raised in the lobby of a South Side police station alongside Aleta Clark, an anti-violence activist in Englewood.
It happened after Clark asked the officers to join her in protest, then posted the photo on Instagram.
Emanuel supported the reprimand. But he acknowledged then that the officers were caught between principles “in conflict” — the need to build community relations and the ban on making political statements while in uniform.