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		LA not sure it will play Trump card in 
		Games bid 
		
		 
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		 [May 13, 2017] 
		By Rory Carroll 
		 
		LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Whether U.S. 
		President Donald Trump will travel to Peru in September to promote Los 
		Angeles' 2024 Olympics bid is an open question but many believe the 
		controversial leader would do more harm than good as the city vies with 
		Paris for the Games. 
		 
		Trump's executive order to temporarily ban travel from six 
		Muslim-majority countries, which is currently being reviewed in the 
		courts, could prove problematic with the diverse membership of the 
		International Olympic Committee when they vote later this year. 
		 
		Los Angeles' fiercely liberal Mayor Eric Garcetti said the Trump White 
		House had been supportive of the bid and despite their many differences, 
		it was one area where they agreed. 
		 
		"The president is willing to play whatever role that we ask and that is 
		needed," Garcetti told reporters on Friday when asked whether Trump 
		would travel to Peru to make a final push. 
		 
		"This is something that has transcended politics." 
		
		
		  
		
		Garcetti said Trump voiced his support for the bid during a phone call 
		in December. At the time, Trump said he would travel to Lima if needed 
		or host IOC President Thomas Bach at the White House. 
		 
		The thorny issue of Trump's impact is even more pronounced since the IOC 
		delegation reviewing the bids is expected to be greeted by France's 
		President-elect Emmanuel Macron when they tour Paris next week. 
		 
		In the election held earlier this month, Macron defeated nationalist 
		Marine Le Pen, whose anti-immigration policies are seen as more in line 
		with Trump's world view. 
		 
		When Garcetti was asked by a reporter from Africa how Trump's 
		restrictive stance on visas would impact athletes and journalists 
		traveling from the continent, he said he had assurances from the 
		administration and Congress that there would be no issues. 
		 
		
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			President Donald Trump gestures while attending a “celebration of 
			military mothers" at the White House in Washington, U.S., May 12, 
			2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
              
			"We had the deputy secretary of Homeland Security here. She was 
			asked a question along those lines and said, 'We can guarantee you 
			that everybody will be able to come in,'" Garcetti said. 
			 
			"I really felt that was the turning of a different page. I think the 
			IOC was very happy to hear that," he said. 
			 
			People close to the Los Angeles bid said a potential visit to Lima 
			was not simply a question of Trump's politics, but also the security 
			apparatus that accompanies a traveling U.S. president. 
			 
			When former President Barack Obama traveled to Copenhagen in October 
			2009 to speak in favor of Chicago's bid for the 2016 Games, IOC 
			members were miffed by the high level of security they had to pass 
			to attend the meeting, which included bomb-sniffing dogs, Olympic 
			sources told Reuters this week. 
			 
			During his presidential campaign, Trump last year criticized Obama 
			for the trip and for failing to deliver the Games. 
			 
			(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Editing by Ian Ransom) 
			
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