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Trump kicks off Veterans Day tribute in NYC

By Associated Press
Published: November 11, 2019, 9:46am
5 Photos
A sign in favor of impeachment is displayed in the windows of an office building near Madison Square Park before President Donald Trump's speech to kick off New York City's 100th annual Veterans Day parade, Monday, Nov. 11, 2019.
A sign in favor of impeachment is displayed in the windows of an office building near Madison Square Park before President Donald Trump's speech to kick off New York City's 100th annual Veterans Day parade, Monday, Nov. 11, 2019. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) Photo Gallery

NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump kicked off New York City’s Veterans Day Tribute on Monday by saying the nation’s veterans “risked everything for us. Now it is our duty to serve and protect them every single day of our lives.”

Trump spoke at the opening of the 100th annual parade organized by the United War Veterans Council in Madison Square Park. He is the first sitting president to accept the group’s invitation to speak at the event.

As Trump spoke, more than 100 protesters gathered and could be heard with whistles and booing. Some chanted “lock him up” and “shame, shame, shame.”

Trump told the crowd that the nation’s veterans often came face to face with evil and did not back down.

“You returned from war and you never forgot your friends who didn’t return,” Trump said. “But your greatest tribute of all is the way you lived your lives in the years since.”

Trump also used the event to tout the strength of the U.S. military and the death of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, saying “al-Baghdadi is dead. His second in charge is dead. We have our eyes on number 3.”

Trump has been a longtime supporter of the parade. The New York Times reported that during the 1990s he pledged $200,000 and offered to raise money from friends in exchange for being named the parade’s grand marshal.

Trump is a lifelong New Yorker but recently changed his official residence to Florida , complaining about his treatment by the heavily Democratic city’s elected officials.

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