Melania Trump faces backlash after revealing new
White House tennis pavilion
First lady’s announcement sparked a slew of Twitter
responses including a terse ‘282,345’ from Washington DC journalist David Corn
Kenya
Evelyn in Washington and agencies
@LiveFromKenya
Mon 7 Dec
2020 22.08 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/dec/07/melania-backlash-tennis-pavilion-twitter
Melania
Trump drew backlash on Monday after announcing that a new tennis pavilion is
set to be unveiled on the south grounds of the White House, as coronavirus
cases and hospitalizations continue to surge across the country.
“It is my
hope that this private space will function as both a place of leisure and
gathering for future first families,” the first lady said in a written
statement on Monday, which came just weeks before the Trump family turns the
White House over to his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, who handily won the 2020
presidential election.
The first
lady went on to thank the “talented craftsmen” who worked on the project and
the “generous supporters of the White House”.
“282,345,”
David Corn, Mother Jones’ DC bureau chief, noted in a terse response, in
reference to the number of people who have died in the US due to coronavirus.
Molly
Jong-Fast, editor-at-large for the Daily Beast, echoed the sarcastic analysis
of others who joked that the first lady had “her finger on the pulse of
America”. She tweeted: “Oh good, those people in their ICU beds will feel so
much better knowing that [Trump] has finished her tennis pavilion.”
A photo of
the newly unveiled structure included the colonnade, parapet wall and fanlight
windows meant to tie the new building to the look and feel of the White House.
In a
release, Melania Trump’s office revealed it had been inspired by the
architecture of its east and west wings. Former president Barack Obama had previously
turned the tennis court into one suitable for basketball.
Planning
for the project began in early 2018, followed by approval in June 2019 by the
commission of fine arts and the national capital planning commission.
Construction was in partnership with the trust for the National Mall and the
National Park Service.
Trump
helped break ground for the project in October 2019, which was funded by
private donations. However, the White House did not disclose the cost.
The
pavilion’s unveiling isn’t the first time the building generated controversy.
Earlier this year the first lady received a firestorm of criticism for tweeting
photos of herself wearing a hard hat while reviewing the structure’s blueprints
as the coronavirus pandemic began to wreck havoc across the country.
Critics
lashed out, calling the photos insensitive.
In
response, Trump tweeted encouraging “everyone who chooses to be negative &
question [her] work at the White House to take time and contribute something
good & productive in their own communities”.
Completion
of the tennis pavilion follows the first lady’s redesign of the White House
rose garden earlier this year.
Biden is
set to take the oath of office as the nation’s 46th president on 20 January.
From then, he will have the power to uproot any or all of Trump’s design should
he choose.
The Associated
Press contributed to this report



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