GOP Rep. Asks Trump To Attend Baseball Game On Anniversary Of Shooting

Aug. 21. 2015 Mobile, AL, Republican presidential candidate and business mogul Donald Trump speaks at his campaign pep rally in Ladd Peebles Stadium. Over 20 thousand came to the Ladd-Peebles Stadium to attend Trumps campaign pep rally though 40000 were expected. . People were asked not to bring signs.
Aug. 21. 2015 Mobile, AL, Republican presidential candidate and business mogul Donald Trump speaks at his campaign pep rally in Ladd Peebles Stadium. Over 20 thousand came to the Ladd-Peebles Stadium to attend Trumps... Aug. 21. 2015 Mobile, AL, Republican presidential candidate and business mogul Donald Trump speaks at his campaign pep rally in Ladd Peebles Stadium. Over 20 thousand came to the Ladd-Peebles Stadium to attend Trumps campaign pep rally though 40000 were expected. . People were asked not to bring signs. (Photo by Julie Dermansky/Corbis via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The coach of the Republican baseball team says he personally asked President Donald Trump to attend the annual game on Thursday, the anniversary of the shooting rampage that wounded the third-ranking GOP leader and others.

“I asked him to come, I guess it was last week, I was over at the Oval Office,” said Rep. Roger Williams, R-Texas. “He said, ‘I’ll be there.'”

The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

The annual game between Republicans and Democrats, which dates to 1909, carries great emotional weight this year in the wake of the attack against House Majority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., and other lawmakers. Scalise sustained life-threatening injuries but returned to work last fall.

Williams said Scalise was expected to start at second base on Thursday at Nationals Park.

Also planning to be at the game, Williams said, were members of Trump’s Cabinet and other special guests.

Thursday also is Trump’s 72nd birthday.

The president has been publicly supportive of Scalise, the Capitol Police officers who were wounded and other first responders. At the State of the Union speech in January, Trump cited Scalise, who was shot in the hip and faced a grueling recovery.

Trump called him “one of the toughest people ever to serve in this House, a guy who took a bullet, almost died, and was back to work three-and-a-half months later, the legend from Louisiana, Congressman Steve Scalise.”

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