Trump fled to bunker as protests over George Floyd raged outside White House
As protests sparked by the death of
George Floyd raged outside the White House on Friday night, Donald Trump was
taken into a special secure bunker.
Floyd’s death in Minneapolis on
Monday, has sparked unrest and protests in dozens of cities across the US,
including Washington DC. Demonstrators have gathered outside the White House
since Friday night, with clashes erupting intermittently outside the very perimeter
of the White House.
As protesters converged on the White
House on Friday, the New York Times reports, “Secret Service agents abruptly
rushed the president to the underground bunker used in the past during
terrorist attacks.”
Hardened to withstand the force of a
passenger jet crashing into the White House, the bunker is the same one that
sheltered vice president Dick Cheney during the terror attacks of September 11,
2001. “The president and his family were rattled by their experience on Friday
night, according to several advisers,” the Times report said.
Trump has been widely criticized for
his response to the protests that have rocked the nation since video of Floyd’s
death began spreading on social media.
Despite days of peaceful protests
and violent clashes with police in some of America’s major cities, Trump has
not addressed the nation and has repeatedly sent inflammatory messages over
Twitter.
Late on Friday, Trump tweeted that
protesters could have been attacked with “vicious dogs and ominous weapons”
wielded by the US Secret Service and accused the DC mayor for supposedly not
providing police to protect the White House.
“They let the ‘protesters’ scream
and rant as much as they wanted, but whenever someone got too frisky or out of
line, they would quickly come down on them, hard – didn’t know what hit them,”
Trump said.
“If they had [breached the fence],”
the president continued, “they would have been greeted with the most vicious
dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen. That’s when people would have
been really badly hurt, at least.”
The president has spoken to George
Floyd’s grieving family, but according to Floyd’s brother, Philonise Floyd, the
conversation was brief. “He didn’t give me an opportunity to even speak,” Floyd
told MSNBC.




