Donald Trump denies asking how to add face to
Mount Rushmore
White House reportedly asked South Dakota official
about expanding monument
Martin
Belam
Mon 10 Aug
2020 13.18 BSTFirst published on Mon 10 Aug 2020 13.16 BST
Donald
Trump has denied that his team ever approached South Dakota’s governor about
adding his face to the iconic monument depicting four presidents at Mount
Rushmore. However, he added that it sounded like a good idea.
The New
York Times reported a Republican party official source on Saturday stating that
a White House aide reached out to Kristi Noem’s office with the question:
“What’s the process to add additional presidents to Mount Rushmore?”
Thanks to
the angle of some of the photographs taken when Trump visited the memorial in
July, it isn’t necessary to Photoshop what it might look like. Trump posed in
such a way that he effectively added himself as a fifth figure on the monument.
According
to reports, the governor had greeted Trump on his recent visit to South Dakota
with a 1.2 metre replica of the monument that already included his face as a
fifth element.
In a 2018
interview, Noem stated that the two had struck up a conversation about the
sculpture in the Oval Office the first time they had met. She claims that she
said to him: “Mr President, you should come to South Dakota some time. We have
Mount Rushmore,” and that he replied: “Do you know it’s my dream to have my
face on Mount Rushmore?”
“I started
laughing,” she said in the interview. “He wasn’t laughing, so he was totally
serious.”
The
president used the sculpture earlier this year as the backdrop for a showy
Independence Day display, which drew protests from Native American activists,
who view the monument as a desecration of land violently stolen from them and
used to pay homage to leaders hostile to native people. On the night he gave a
divisive speech claiming that the US was under siege from “far-left fascism”.
The four
presidents depicted on Mount Rushmore were chosen in the 1920s by the sculptor
Gutzon Borglum for their leadership during what were seen then as the four
phases of America: George Washington leading the birth of the nation; Thomas
Jefferson sparking its westward expansion; Abraham Lincoln preserving the union
and emancipating slaves; Teddy Roosevelt championing industrial innovation.
Trump has
previously joked about adding his face to the monument during an Ohio rally in
2017, using it as the basis for an attack on the media. “Now here’s what I’d
do,” Trump said. “I’d ask whether or not you some day think I will be on Mount
Rushmore. If I did it joking – totally joking, having fun – the fake news media
will say, ‘He believes he should be on Mount Rushmore.’ So I won’t say
it.”

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