- The Washington Times - Thursday, January 30, 2025

President Trump and lawmakers from both parties joined pundits and online activists to quickly heap blame on their political opponents in the hours immediately after the fatal midair collision in Washington — all with no evidence to support their claims.

Mr. Trump was an early target for blame and one to point the finger back at Democrats.

Mr. Trump and other Republicans said Democrats’ zeal for diversity, equity and inclusion had undermined the Federal Aviation Administration’s chief mission of safety.



“I put safety first. [President] Obama, Biden and the Democrats put policy first, and they put politics at the level that nobody’s ever seen because this was the lowest level,” Mr. Trump told reporters at the White House. “Their policy was horrible, and their politics was even worse.”

He said it was “common sense” that DEI was connected to the collision of an Army helicopter and an American Airlines passenger jet, presumably killing everyone on both aircraft.

“It just could have been. We had a much higher standard than anybody else, and there are things where you have to go by brain power,” the president said.


SEE ALSO: Trump says Dems put ‘policy’ ahead of airline safety, links DEI initiatives to D.C. plane crash


On the receiving end of Mr. Trump’s ire, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg called the president’s remarks “despicable” and urged him to “show actual leadership.”

“As families grieve, Trump should be leading, not lying,” he said on X. “We put safety first, drove down close calls, grew Air Traffic Control, and had zero commercial airline crash fatalities out of millions of flights on our watch.”

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Democrats blamed Mr. Trump’s federal hiring freeze for the crash Wednesday night just outside Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

Rep. Norma Torres of California posted earlier statements by fellow Democrats on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee who criticized Mr. Trump’s hiring freeze. “Praying for families and demanding answers,” she said.

In a now-deleted social media post, CNN commentator Bakari Sellers displayed the same statements by committee Democrats who called Mr. Trump’s executive action “a dangerous freeze of air traffic control hiring.” Above it, Mr. Sellers wrote: “8 days ago.”

He later apologized, writing that he deleted the post because “timing matters. Politics at this point does not.”


SEE ALSO: FLASHBACK: FAA turned away qualified air traffic controllers based solely on race


“I [messed] up, I own that,” he said. “I am very prayerful, but I’m also very frustrated, upset and disturbed with where we are as a country. I recognize, and I will do better.”

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• Alex Miller can be reached at amiller@washingtontimes.com.

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