At Coast Guard Academy graduation, Trump heralds ‘golden age’ – CT Mirror

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President Donald Trump proclaimed Wednesday that graduating Coast Guard Academy cadets will enter the service in a “golden age” of America, projecting confidence at a time when the country is reckoning with an unpopular war.

Trump received a warm reception on a blistering hot day as he made his way onto Cadet Memorial Field, despite the presence of a few hundred protesters gathered nearby, outside of the New London campus. He was greeted with a 21-gun salute before delivering the keynote address at the Academy’s 145th commencement.

The nearly hour-long speech to cadets and their families weaved between praise and admiration for the class of 2026 and his common refrains about a once-beleaguered country that has made a rebound.

“I hate to say it, but I will,” Trump said. “A year ago … the last administration, we were a dead country, now we’re the hottest country in the world.”

“Our morale is back, confidence is back. America is back, bigger and better and stronger than ever before,” he added later. “We went very sadly, of course, for years Washington, D.C., was run by foolish politicians.”

sinking approval rating months out from a critical midterm election where a shift in the balance of power in Congress could threaten his agenda for his remaining time in office. The war has led to a spike in gas prices, bred uncertainty in the Middle East and disappointed his base that was promised the end to “forever wars” during his campaign for president.

Trump spoke from the podium with the presidential seal surrounded by protective barriers. Security has ramped up for events after a few assassination attempts. Trump was ushered off stage last month after a gunman ran through security and tried to reach the ballroom at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington.

abruptly fired last year, a day after Trump’s inauguration.

The president heaped praise on the graduating cadets who were about to become commissioned officers. He invited a number of them on stage who excelled in academics, fitness and athletics and had friendly exchanges.

Light on the politics

Politics intruded lightly on the ceremony, mostly reflected in Gov. Ned Lamont  declining a White House invitation and the Republican gubernatorial nominee, state Sen. Ryan Fazio of Greenwich, managing to get seats in the bleachers for himself and his fiancée, Amy Orser.

Trump was warmly received as he made his entrance from behind bleachers in the north end zone and walked to the stage erected on the 50-yard line. His more political lines — pronouncing America “dead” prior to his return to the White House — drew polite applause. Many in the audience did not applaud. One man yelled, “You go!”

Fazio neither sought a meeting with the president, nor was he offered one. A photo with the president during a Republican primary would have been invaluable, and Fazio had reached out to the White House for a potential endorsement prior to him locking up the GOP nomination. Prior to becoming a gubernatorial candidate, Fazio declined to say how he voted for president. He now volunteers he voted for Trump all three times.

Was it fair to say he no longer was seeking an endorsement or campaign appearance from the president?

“I’m focused on Connecticut voters, and, you know, I appreciate the support of anyone, any of our leaders in any party, in order to  win statewide in Connecticut,” he said.

Lamont, who faces a primary challenge from the left, saw no advantage in greeting a president who has sued his administration, most recently challenging a new law asserting an ability by the state to oversee use of force by federal immigration agents.

As Lamont told the Connecticut Mirror Monday, “I’m just gonna be sitting there for an hour hearing him lie about the war in Iran, and probably take pot shots at Connecticut. I go to the Coast Guard graduations a lot, but this year, I’m gonna take a pass.”

Fazio faulted the governor for his absence

“This is about celebrating our Coast Guard cadets, who are willing to sacrifice their own personal safety and lives for the rest of us,” Fazio said. “Being that it’s in Connecticut, I think it would have have been appropriate for the highest-ranking member of our state government to be present.”

Protesters gather nearby

Before Trump’s arrival at Cadet Memorial Field in the late morning, protestors gathered in McKinley Park in New London, chanting and carrying signs in protest of Trump. Police estimated the crowd at between 200 and 300 people.

shuttering of DEI-related programs and a transgender troop ban.

Kristi Noem, the former secretary of DHS, was fired in March over her handling of the administration’s immigration crackdown and personal matters that gave way to unflattering attention and headlines. Markwayne Mullin, a U.S. senator from Oklahoma, was installed as her successor. He also spoke at Wednesday’s commencement to introduce the president.

Alex Matthiessen, a 65-year-old who attended last year’s protest at McKinley Park when Noem spoke at the Coast Guard Academy graduation, said she felt the situation in the U.S. had gotten worse in the intervening year. She mentioned rising food prices, high gas prices and corruption in the White House.

“It’s very overwhelming for people,” Matthiessen said. “I mean, this [protest] is such a small thing, you know? It’s all we can do right now. And trying to work on the elections in the fall. That’s what we can do.”

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