Marines Say
Military Helicopter Did Not Hover Low Over Trump Campaign Rally
A video shared by
President Donald Trump this week prompted new questions about the use of
military aircraft at political campaign rallies.
Trump on Wednesday shared
a Twitter video appearing to compare the crowd sizes at one of his campaign
rallies to a socially distanced event held by former Vice President Joe Biden.
The video of Trump's
campaign, taken during an Oct. 23 rally in The Villages retirement community in
Sumter County, Florida, appears to show the Marine One presidential helicopter
hovering low over a cheering crowd while Creedence Clearwater Revival's
"Fortunate Son" plays in the background.
But the Marine
Corps says the angle at which the video was taken doesn't show the
full picture.
"The flight did not
fly over (or hover over) the assembled crowd," Capt. Joe Butterfield, a Marine
spokesman at the Pentagon, said. "The entire flight was conducted in
accordance with U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps regulations,
operating procedures and safety protocols."
Marine One, which is
flown by members of Marine Helicopter Squadron One, landed at a safe distance
from the crowd, he added, which the camera angle "does not appear to fully
capture."
Footage from central
Florida's Spectrum News 13, which captured the helo's approach from another
angle, shows Marine One landing in a green space in front of the rally.
"In accordance
with U.S. Navy regulations, no review or investigation is necessary,"
Butterfield said.
The Trump campaign did
not respond to questions about the aircraft's movements or the decision to have
a Marine Corps aircraft appear so prominently at a political campaign event,
given the military's nonpartisan status.
The iconic Air
Force One jet routinely appears behind Trump at political campaign
rallies, and has for other politicians, too. Presidents can use the plane to
travel to campaign events. Whether the aircraft should be featured at those
events is debated by experts.
Richard Painter, a
former White House ethics lawyer and law professor, told The Washington
Post in 2017 that presidents should put some distance between a political
speech and famous taxpayer-funded aircraft.
"They can do all
of the theatrics, but when he gives the speech, the plane should be to the
side," Painter told the Post.
When Hillary Clinton
accompanied then-President Barack Obama on Air Force One in 2016 when the two
appeared together at a North Carolina campaign rally, Trump slammed the trip.
"Taxpayers are
paying a fortune for the use of Air Force One on the campaign trail by
President Obama and Crooked Hillary," he tweeted at the time. "A
total disgrace!"
When an Air Force F-16 Fighting Falcon was scrambled
Wednesday to intercept a civilian aircraft flying near a Trump campaign rally
in Arizona, it set off flares to get the aircraft's attention. Trump, who heard
the aircraft while giving a speech on the ground, told the crowd the fighter
was giving "the president a little
display" after white streams from the flares appeared in
the sky.
This is the second time a military
helicopter's movements near crowds have raised questions in recent months. An investigation
was launched in June after videos emerged of Army National Guard helicopters appearing to
fly dangerously low over protesters in Washington, D.C., kicking up debris
around demonstrators.
Military Headlines, Donald
Trump, Aircraft, Elections,
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