Trump touts national unity over air disaster before bashing Biden and Obama
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President Trump speaks to reporters in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Jan. 30. Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
President Trump after briefly offering condolences and sharing plans to investigate a deadly plane collision outside D.C., took partisan hits against former presidents Obama and Biden.
The big picture: Trump said the White House had "strong opinions" on the collision, railed against his political opponents and blasted the FAA's diversity, equity and inclusion programs.
- Trump vowed to "find out how this disaster occurred" and "ensure that nothing like this ever happens again."
- Trump confirmed the midair collision of a regional jet and a Black Hawk helicopter left no survivors. The incident was the first mass casualty event involving a commercial aircraft in the U.S. in at least 15 years.
Driving the news: The president revealed he was "immediately appointing" Chris Rocheleau as acting Federal Aviation Administration administrator.
- Former FAA chief Mike Whitaker departed the agency at the start of Trump's term.
- Trump ally Elon Musk had publicly pressured him to resign last fall after Whitaker told lawmakers SpaceX must operate at the "highest level of safety" and defended a proposed fine against the space giant.
"I put safety first. Obama, Biden and the Democrats put policy first," Trump said Thursday, repeatedly suggesting without evidence that DEI initiatives had hampered aviation safety.
- Trump, during his first week in office, signed a memorandum instructing the Transportation secretary and FAA administrator to "stop Biden DEI hiring programs."
- He slammed former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg as "a disaster," claiming he ran the agency into the ground "with his diversity."
The other side: Buttigieg condemned the president's comments as "despicable" in a statement.
- "As families grieve, Trump should be leading, not lying," he wrote. "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."
What they're saying: Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.), the ranking member of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, said in a statement shared just as Trump began speaking that it "never does any good to speculate on the causes of aviation accidents before we have the facts and the details."
- During Thursday's briefing, Trump rejected the idea that he was getting ahead of the investigation by placing blame on Democrats, DEI initiatives, air traffic control and others.
- Asked how he concluded that DEI policies somehow triggered the crash, Trump replied, "because I have common sense."
Catch up quick: The Black Hawk helicopter was carrying three soldiers conducting a training run, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Thursday morning. American Airlines confirmed Wednesday that 60 passengers and four crew members were on the plane.
- Both aircraft plunged into the Potomac River. Remnants of both have been discovered.
- American Eagle Flight 5342 was traveling from Wichita to Reagan National Airport (DCA), which is something described as having "America's busiest runway."
- Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy said at a Thursday press briefing that "everything was standard in the lead-up to the crash."
Go deeper: D.C. plane crash: What we know about the collision as authorities say no survivors found
Editor's note: This story has been updated with additional developments.
