Rather than focus on the victims or provide substantive details about the ongoing investigation, Trump and his officials used the tragedy to attack Democrats and falsely blame former Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama and diversity, equity, and inclusion. Provided

American hate continued in one of its worst forms as political partisanship and racism consumed briefings that featured President Donald Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The briefings followed the devastating midair collision over Reagan National Airport that killed all 64 people aboard an American Airlines flight and at least three military personnel in a Black Hawk helicopter.

Rather than focus on the victims or provide substantive details about the ongoing investigation, Trump and his officials used the tragedy to attack Democrats and falsely blame former Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama. Obama, who left office in 2017, was somehow dragged into the conversation, while Trump and his allies baselessly claimed the crash resulted from diversity, equity, and inclusion policiesโ€”initiatives that have been in place in the federal government since at least the 1960s after President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act.

Even as mainstream media figures like Bakari Sellers urged against assigning blame so soon after the crash, Trump once again showed no bottom. Instead of acknowledging the gravity of the moment, he seized on the disaster to push his political agenda.

โ€œWe must have only the highest standards for those who work in our aviation system. I changed the Obama standards from very mediocre at best to extraordinary,โ€ Trump claimed, without citing any policy changes or evidence.

โ€œAnd then when I left office and Biden took over, he changed them back to lower than ever before. I put safety first, Obama, Biden, and the Democrats put policy first,โ€ he continued. โ€œTheir policy was horrible, and their politics was even worse.โ€

Trump then took aim at what he called an โ€œFAA diversity push,โ€ spewing falsehoods about hiring standards.

โ€œTheyโ€™re including people with severe intellectual and psychiatric disabilitiesโ€”itโ€™s amazing,โ€ he said.

From there, he turned his attacks to former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg.

โ€œDo you know how badly everythingโ€™s run since heโ€™s run the Department of Transportation?โ€ Trump said. โ€œHeโ€™s a disaster. He was a disaster as a mayor. He ran his city into the ground, and heโ€™s a disaster. Now heโ€™s just got a good line of bullsโ€”.โ€

Vance, Duffy, and Hegseth echoed Trumpโ€™s attacks, claiming that only the โ€œbest and brightestโ€ should be hired in air traffic control and government agencies.

โ€œIf you go back to just some of the headlines over the past 10 years, you have many hundreds of people suing the government because they would like to be air traffic controllers, but they were turned away because of the color of their skin,โ€ Vance falsely asserted, offering no proof.

Hegseth piled on, declaring that โ€œthe era of DEI is gone at the Defense Department.โ€

โ€œThe best leaders possibleโ€”whether itโ€™s flying Black Hawks, flying airplanes, leading platoons, or in governmentโ€”will be chosen based on merit,โ€ Hegseth said.

Duffy blamed the crash on government hiring practices without offering any evidence.

โ€œWe are going to take responsibility at the Department of Transportation and the FAA to make sure we have the reforms that have been dictated by President Trump in place to make sure that these mistakes do not happen again and again,โ€ he said.

Meanwhile, as Trump and his allies turned a national tragedy into a political spectacle, Democrats urged patience while investigators worked to determine the cause of the crash.

โ€œIt never does any good to speculate on the causes of aviation accidents before we have the facts and the details,โ€ Rep. Rick Larsen (D-WA) said. โ€œIt is important to let the NTSB complete its work before we consider any potential policy response.โ€

โ€œMy heart goes out to the families of the victims on both aircraft following last nightโ€™s awful tragedy,โ€ he added.

Among those killed were 14 skaters returning home from a national development camp in Wichita, Kansas, including six members of the Skating Club of Bostonโ€”two teenage athletes, their mothers, and two coaches.

Doug Zeghibe, CEO of The Skating Club of Boston, fought back tears as he spoke to NBC Boston.

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