Trump to visit Pittsburgh amid funerals,
calls for him to stay away
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[October 30, 2018]
By Jessica Resnick-Ault
PITTSBURGH (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump was due to visit Pittsburgh on Tuesday, as mourners
prepared to hold the first funerals for victims of the synagogue
massacre and Jewish leaders said he would not be welcome until he
denounced white nationalism.
Trump said he would visit hospitalized police officers and other people
wounded in Saturday's mass shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue that
killed 11 worshipers in the deadliest ever attack on America's Jewish
community.
"I’m just going to pay my respects," Trump told Fox News on Monday
night. "I would have done it even sooner, but I didn’t want to disrupt
anymore than they already had disruption. But I look forward to going to
Pittsburgh."
Robert Bowers, 46, is accused of storming into the synagogue in
Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill section yelling "All Jews must die" and
opening fire on members of three congregations holding Sabbath prayer
services there.
The bloodshed has heightened a national debate over Trump's political
rhetoric, which his critics say has contributed to a surge in right-wing
extremism in the United States.

"Yes, words matter," Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto, a Democrat, said
during a CNN interview on Monday.
The Trump administration has rejected the notion he has encouraged white
nationalists and neo-Nazis who have embraced him. Trump said during the
interview on Fox News that he did not have to clarify his nationalism.
"It means I love the country, it means I’m fighting for the country," he
said. "I’m proud of this country and I call that nationalism. I call it
being a nationalist and I don’t see any other connotation than that."
"YOU ARE NOT WELCOME"
Tree of Life Rabbi Jeffrey Myers told ABC on Monday that the President
of the United States was always welcome to visit.
But a group of local Jewish leaders told Trump in an open letter: "you
are not welcome in Pittsburgh until you fully denounce white
nationalism."
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People pay their respects at a makeshift memorial outside the Tree
of Life synagogue following Saturday's shooting at the synagogue in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S., October 29, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal
McNaughton

More than 43,000 people have signed the letter, organized and posted
online by the Pittsburgh chapter of Bend the Arc, a Jewish
organization opposed to what it calls "the immoral agenda of the
Trump administration and the Republican Party."
Pittsburgh's mayor Peduto said he was also against Trump's visit
because it would coincide with the first funerals - David Rosenthal,
54, and his brother Cecil Rosenthal, 59, are due to be buried on
Tuesday.
Peduto said Trump should wait until all the funerals were held, and
the visit and additional security measures entailed would distract
attention from the "priority" of burying the dead.
The trip comes just a week before the hotly contested Nov. 6
congressional elections that will determine whether Trump's
Republican Party will retain a majority in Congress.
On Monday, a U.S. magistrate judge ordered the suspect, Bowers, to
be held without bond. The onetime truck driver, who frequently
posted anti-Semitic material online and was described by neighbors
as a loner, was charged with 29 federal felony counts and could face
the death penalty if convicted.
Prosecutors have said they are treating the mass shooting as a hate
crime.
In addition to the 11 mostly elderly worshipers who were killed, six
people, including four police officers, were wounded before the
suspect was shot by police and surrendered. Two of the surviving
victims remained hospitalized in critical condition.

(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by
Andrew Heavens)
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