Trump’s West Point appearance will include coronavirus precautions
President Trump is scheduled to deliver the commencement address Saturday at the U.S. Military Academy – and it’s expected to be unlike any commencement held in recent memory at West Point, N.Y. That’s because numerous precautions are being made to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. For
one thing, the event won’t be held at 38,000-seat Michie Stadium, where
the academy’s football team plays. Instead, it will be held on the
Parade Field, an open area surrounded by statues of legendary U.S. Army
generals, such as Washington, Eisenhower, MacArthur and Patton. For
another, family members of the cadets will be watching via livestream.
They won’t be there in person to watch their loved ones graduate.
President Donald Trump walks onto the field ahead of an NCAA
college football game between Army and Navy, Saturday, Dec. 14, 2019, in
Philadelphia. (Associated Press)
“This is a real unique year. It really is,” Sherman
Fleek, the West Point Command historian, told lohud.com. “I've already
been asked, ‘Is this the most unusual year for disruption and events?’
And I said, ‘Fifty years from now, they'll make a determination. You
just can't say this is it.’” The 1,100 cadets in attendance also
will be seated six feet apart, in keeping with medical officials’ advice
regarding social distancing. There will also be no handshaking, lohud.com reported. And
the swearing-in of the cadets as second lieutenants – which normally
occurs after the ceremony – has instead already happened, on May 23 via
computer, the outlet reported. After some initial concern that the
event might be canceled because of the virus, academy officials
announced in April that they would proceed “after careful consideration
of the steps the Army can take to mitigate risk,” Army Secretary Ryan
McCarthy said at the time. When President Trump initially disclosed his plans
to speak at West Point, the date was set for May 23 but was
subsequently changed to Saturday amid the disruptions caused by the
coronavirus. The president expressed some disappointment at the time that the ceremony would be altered from previous years. “They’ll
have some big distance, so it will be very different than it ever
looked,” the president said, according to The Hill. “Do I like the look?
No, I don’t. And eventually, next year, they’ll have a commencement
like it’s been.” This
will be Trump’s first commencement address at West Point, joining a
long list of presidents including Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard
Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, Lyndon
Johnson, John Kennedy, Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush,
Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Taft was secretary
of war at the time of his speech; Eisenhower also spoke there while
chief of staff; and George H.W. Bush previously spoke there twice as
vice president. Vice President Mike Pence spoke at West Point last spring.
No comments:
Post a Comment