“On Aug. 9, 2020, U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted that he thought it would be a ‘good idea’ to add his
likeness to Mount Rushmore in South Dakota.
“Trump’s
tweet was reacting to a CNN story reporting
that Trump had previously expressed serious aspirations of seeing his face join
the likenesses of former U.S. Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson,
Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln on the Mount Rushmore National Monument
in South Dakota. But Trump’s claim that he had ‘never suggested’ placing his
image on Mount Rushmore isn’t exactly true. Reportedly, he stated the
desire once to
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem.
“As
CNN’s headline notes (‘New York Times: White House reached out to South Dakota
governor about adding Trump to Mount Rushmore’), the cable television story was
aggregated from an article published
by The New York Times on Aug. 8, 2020.
“The Times story dealt with speculation about whether Trump had
discussed replacing Vice President Mike Pence as his 2020 running mate with
South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem. In so doing, the news story also brought up
older news reports about Trump’s inquiries regarding Mount Rushmore:
“‘After
all, the president had told her in
the Oval Office that he aspired to have his image etched on the monument. And
last year, a White House aide reached out to the governor’s office with a
question, according to a Republican official familiar with the conversation:
What’s the process to add additional presidents to Mount Rushmore?’
“The
Times also cited an unnamed White House official who ‘noted that it is a
federal, not state, monument.’ Noem herself had stated that Trump asked her
seriously about having his face placed on the monument. She recounted the
conversation with Trump in 2018 as a guest on South Dakota resident Mitchell
Olson’s own version of ‘Carpool Karaoke.’ At the time, she was representing
South Dakota in the U.S. House and running for governor. Speaking to Olson, she
said:
“‘The
first time (we spoke) we were in the Oval Office. He said, ‘Kristi, come on
over here, shake my hand.’ And so I shook his hand and I said, ‘Mr. President,
you should come to South Dakota some time. We have Mount Rushmore.’ And he
goes, ‘Did you know it’s my dream to have my face on Mount Rushmore?’ And I
started laughing. And he wasn’t laughing, so he was totally serious. And then
within a month or so, he said it in public, and he got a lot of criticism. But,
I said, come pick out a mountain.’
“During
a July 2017 political rally in Youngstown, Ohio, Trump again raised the
issue, saying he was joking: ‘Every single president on Mount Rushmore. Now
here’s what I do. I’d ask whether or not you think I will someday be on Mount
Rushmore. But here’s the problem. If I did it, joking, totally joking, having
fun, the fake news media will say, ‘He believes he should be on Mount
Rushmore.’ So I won’t say it, okay?’
“We
asked the White House whether one of the president’s aides had asked the South
Dakota governor’s office about the process of putting another president’s face
on the monument or whether Trump had raised the issue with Noem. We did not
receive a response in time for publication. Neither did a spokesperson for
Noem’s office respond when we sought confirmation that Trump had made the
aforementioned comments to Noem.
“Reporting on the issue in 2018, the South Dakota newspaper
Argus Leader quoted Maureen
McGee-Ballinger, public information officer at Mount Rushmore, as stating that
the question had been asked in the past by advocates about putting former
Presidents Franklin Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, or Barack Obama on the
monument, but that there was no space to allow an additional president to be
carved there.
“Because
Trump suggested his image should be placed on Mount Rushmore in his Aug. 9,
2020, tweet, and in a conversation recounted by Noem in the Carpool Karaoke
video, we rate this claim ‘True’” (Bethania Palma, Snopes, August
10, 2020).
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