GOP Senators Freak When Asked About Cost Of Trump’s Military Parade | EUROtoday

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WASHINGTON – They snapped. They stared off into house. They zipped into Senate elevators and smiled because the doorways closed with them safely inside.

This is how practically a dozen Senate Republicans reacted Wednesday when requested the best query: Do you propose to attend President Donald Trump’s navy parade in D.C. on Saturday, and are you comfy with its estimated $45 million price ticket?

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“I won’t be here in town, but I wish I was,” lamented Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.).

Asked concerning the tens of thousands and thousands of {dollars} the occasion goes to price taxpayers, Fischer walked into a close-by Senate elevator and gazed into nothingness because the doorways closed.

At least the Nebraska senator spoke. Sen. Ted Budd (R-N.C.) clocked in at eight seconds of silence in response to HuffPost asking the identical query. With an enormous grin, Budd slipped into one other elevator and stood there, ready for the doorways to shut.

“Nope,” Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) mentioned, fidgeting on his telephone, when requested if he deliberate to attend. He set free an enormous sigh when requested concerning the parade’s price ticket, and began speaking about unrelated laws.

“I’m focused on the trillions right now, which is the reconciliation bill,” Young mentioned. “So I think my constituents would assess that my priorities are appropriate.”

Asked if which means he’s comfy with how a lot Trump’s navy occasion will price taxpayers, he snapped: “I answered the question.”

When HuffPost identified he didn’t truly reply the query, Young interrupted, “I answered the question I wanted to answer!’

"I answered the question I wanted to answer!"
“I answered the question I wanted to answer!”

Bill Clark via Getty Images

Saturday’s parade is being billed as a celebration of the Army’s 250th anniversary, but it’s also timed with Trump’s 79th birthday. The event will feature thousands of soldiers150 military vehicles and more than 50 aircraft being rolled around the streets of D.C.

Millions of people nationwide will be protesting Trump at the same time as his parade, in response to his harsh crackdown on immigration enforcement and his decision to deploy the U.S. military to Los Angeles to respond to unrest there. The “No Kings Day” protests are occurring in all 50 states and in additional than 1,500 cities, although not in D.C.

An apparent purpose Senate Republicans don’t wish to discuss the price of this parade is that they’ve been on a tear about slashing so-called authorities waste since Trump took workplace, and a huge navy parade for the president isn’t precisely important.

“I might be,” Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) mentioned of attending the parade. As for its prices? “Uh, I have not looked into the price.”

But GOP senators additionally don’t wish to say something that can anger the president, even when deep down, they’re not comfortable about spending tens of thousands and thousands of {dollars} on one thing that the second-highest-ranking U.S. common informed Trump in his first time period is “what dictators do.” So they appear to be choosing going silent or fleeing the scene.

“I am committed in Boise,” Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) mentioned of his plans for Saturday. “I appreciate the Army and the fact that they’re 250 years old.”

As for the price of the navy parade, he simply walked away, saying, “That’s all you’re going to get.”

Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) dismissed any dialog in any respect about it, saying she doesn’t “do hallway interviews.” (Most conversations with the press occur in Senate hallways.)

“No comment,” mentioned Tom Cotton (R-Ark.). “No comment.”

“That’s all you’re going to get," said Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), when asked if he's comfortable spending $45 million on a military parade for Trump.
“That’s all you’re going to get,” said Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho), when asked if he’s comfortable spending $45 million on a military parade for Trump.

Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images

To be sure, a few Republicans said they were fine with the costs to put on the event.

“Listen, the Army has done a lot for us,” mentioned Sen. Markwayne Mullen (R-Okla.). “The idea that we get to celebrate their 250th birthday, I think they deserve to have a good celebration.”

He won’t be there, though. “It is my 28th wedding anniversary,” he said. “I choose marriage.”

Sen. Jim Justice (R-W.Va.) said he’s very supportive of “a celebration of our president’s birthday,” and the costs of the parade don’t bother him because he wants it to look impressive to people in other countries.

“I mean, if you go out there with, you know, two jeeps and an M-16, you know, how does the world perceive that?” Justice said. “Come on now, this is America, you know?… If we’re going to do it, let’s put on a big show.”

Out of 14 GOP senators, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) was the only one HuffPost talked to who criticized holding the parade. It’s not just because of its hefty costs, he said, but also because he doesn’t think ”the symbolism of tanks and missiles” represents what the United States is all about.

“If you ask me about a military parade, all the images that come to mind, the first images, are of the Soviet Union and North Korea,” he mentioned.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/gop-senators-trump-military-parade-cost_n_6849b95de4b0cf5f0c9ad0ab