Donald Trump’s spokeswoman insisted the president’s assault on the NFL was all about defending the American flag today as she beat back criticism of his controversial comments.
‘The President is not talking about race. The President is talking about pride in our country,’ White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said during a press conference.
Sanders backed up Trump’s use of the term SOB’s to describe football players refusing to stand at games during the national anthem, saying it’s ‘always appropriate’ for the president to go to bat for the military, the flag and the national anthem.
Donald Trump ‘s spokeswoman insisted the president’s assault on the NFL was all about defending the American flag today as she beat back criticism of his controversial comments
She contended that Trump’s remarks on Friday evening, that he revisited several times throughout the weekend, were not a distraction.
The White House official further argued that ‘it’s a priority’ for the U.S. president to defend the nation’s flag.
‘This should be something that every American can get behind.’
Sanders spent the bulk of her briefing backing her boss up on his NFL comments.
She followed in the footsteps of Trump’s Treasury secretary and his director of legislative affairs, the administration’s designated representatives on yesterday’s news programs.
‘Look, this isn’t about the President being against anyone. 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,’ Sanders sated.
This morning Trump fanned the flames when he tweeted: ‘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!’
Another early morning post to the social media platform said, ‘Many people booed the players who kneeled yesterday (which was a small percentage of total). These are fans who demand respect for our Flag!’
Last season, San Francisco 49ers player Colin Kaepernick began kneeling during the Star Spangled Banner as a quiet way to protest racial inequality. This season Kaepernick wasn’t picked up to play for a team, though other players have taken up his mantle.
Trump accused the players of ‘disrespecting the flag’ in a Friday speech, setting off a nationwide conversation about the protests and racial injustice.
His aides had a number of reasons that the president was right and his critics were wrong when the topic came up on Sunday.
‘I think the reality is that there are high school coaches across America today who are punished for leading their players in prayer. And, yet, when an NFL player takes a knee, somehow that player is presumed to be a martyr for a social cause,’ Marc Short, the White House director of legislative affairs, told NBC’s Chuck Todd.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, speaking to Jake Tapper on CNN, pointed out that the professional football league has ‘different types of rules’ for nearly everything, so why not this.
‘What the president is saying –and I think the owners should meet and they should vote on a rule – this is about respect for our military, this is about respect for our first responders, this is not about Republicans or Democrats,’ Mnuchin told Tapper.
On the Sunday shows, White House and cabinet officials defended President Trump’s position on NFL players taking the knee during the national anthem
President Trump’s Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) and Director of Legislative Affairs Marc Short (right) defended the content and timing of Trump’s comments this weekend on NFL players taking the knee during the National Anthem
President Trump doubled down on remarks he made by dashing off two tweets Sunday morning suggesting players should be fired for taking the knee – and the American public should boycott NFL games
‘Players have the right for free speech off the field,’ the Treasury secretary added.
Mnuchin said he didn’t understand why the NFL would bar a team from, say, decorating their helmets, yet not step in on this issue.
‘But now the NFL is saying people should be able to decide what they want to do and disrespect the United States flag,’ the treasury secretary scoffed.
Tapper interjected and said he was playing ‘devil’s advocate,’ pointing out the players don’t believe they’re dishonoring the American flag, but instead engaging in peaceful protest.
On CNN, the State of the Union host noted to Mnuchin that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell had sided with the players, calling the president’s comments ‘divisive,’ as had New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, who’s a personal friend of Trump’s.
‘Why is this a fight that the president wants to have?’ the CNN newsman asked.
On Sunday morning, Trump had doubled down on previous comments he made about athletes and taking the knee by suggested Americans should boycott football games to punish those who are protesting.
The president also advised that the players participating be axed.
‘If NFL fans refuse to go to games until players stop disrespecting our Flag & Country, you will see change take place fast. Fire or suspend!’ Trump tweeted.
‘NFL attendance and ratings are WAY DOWN. Boring games yes, but many stay away because they love our country. League should back U.S.,’ the president added.
Despite the president’s fresh tweets, Mnuchin answered Tapper by saying, ‘I don’t think it’s a question of a fight the president wants to have.’
‘He thinks this is about respect for the military and so many people who put their lives at risk and what the country stands for,’ Mnuchin said.
The Treasury secretary repeated his idea for the owners to come together and make a rule on whether players can take the knee.
‘Again, for as long as I can remember, people have stood in honor of this country, this isn’t about politics,’ Mnuchin said. ‘If people want to talk politics off the field when they’re not working for the NFL, they have the absolute right to do that.’
Over on NBC, Todd asked Short if Trump was harping on the athletes to distract from the news of the Republican health care vote.
On Friday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., had again said that he planned to vote no on the latest Senate GOP-led effort to kill Obamacare, despite the bill being authored by one of his closest friends in the Senate, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
On CNN Sunday, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said it was ‘very difficult’ for her to envision a scenario where she wouldn’t vote no – which means there’s no road for the Republicans to get it passed.
‘I think you’re probably reading much more into it than there is,’ Short told Todd. ‘I think the president has felt this way on this position for awhile. Friday night was a forum in which he could express it.’
‘I don’t think it has anything to do with the health care vote coming up,’ Short added.
On Friday night, Trump took the stage in Huntsville, Alabama, at a rally to support incumbent Republican Sen. Luther Strange, who is facing a tough run-off against another GOP candidate.
There, Trump said it would be great if an NFL owner responded to a player protesting by saying, ‘Get that son of a b***h off the field right now, out, he’s fired. He’s fired!’
On Saturday morning, Trump had refocused his ire on basketball instead, lashing out at Golden State Warriors player Steph Curry, who had said the day before that he didn’t want to go to the White House to celebrate his team’s championship win.
The Warriors point guard said he and his teammates could ‘inspire some change’ by refusing the president’s invite.
‘Going to the White House is considered a great honor for a championship team,’ Trump wrote Saturday morning. ‘Stephen Curry is hesitating, therefore invitation is withdrawn!’
On Meet the Press, Todd had pointed out to Short that only 26 percent of Americans thought race relations were good, and asked if Trump’s Twitter battles with athletes like Curry, who is of mixed race, were helpful.
‘I think the president believes it is his role to improve race relations,’ Short responded. ‘But it’s also important to note that we had an historic election in 2008, electing the first African American president. But race relations didn’t improve under his tenure, either,’ Short added, referencing Trump’s predecessor, President Barack Obama.
Short called Curry an ‘amazing shot.’
‘But why the Warriors chose to politicize an invitation to the White House, I think, is unfortunate,’ Short added.
‘Chuck, I think the reality is that the White House is something special. And if they don’t want to come to the White House, then the president says to them, “Don’t come,”‘ he added.
Trump has so far hosted the Clemson Tigers, New England Patriots and Chicago Cubs at the White House since taking office in January.
On Sunday, hockey’s Stanley Cup champions, the Pittsburgh Penguins, said they accepted Trump’s invitation as well.