TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) â President Donald Trump offered some encouraging words and advice for graduating students at the University of Alabama on Thursday in a speech interspersed with complaints about his critics, accusations that judges were âinterferingâ with his agenda and attacks on his predecessor, Joe Biden.
The Republicanâs jolting speech was standard fare for Trump and well-received by the crowd in deep-red Alabama, which backed him in all three of his presidential runs.
âYouâre the first graduating class of the golden age of America,â the president told the graduates.
But he quickly launched into a campaign-style diatribe, saying that the U.S. was being âripped offâ before he took office and that the last four years, when he was out of power, âwere not good for our country.â
âBut donât let that scare you,â he said. âIt was an aberration.â
The president of the University of Alabama, Stuart Bell, told graduates before Trump took the stage that Thursday nightâs event was all about them.
âThis special ceremony offers a meaningful opportunity for you, for I, to reflect on the important connection between academic inquiry, civic leadership, and public service,â Bell said.
Trump mostly went in a different direction.
He did a grunting impression of a female weightlifter as he criticized the participation of transgender women in sports. He bragged about how tech moguls have warmed up to him, saying, âThey all hated me in my first term, and now theyâre kissing my ass.â
And he falsely claimed that the 2020 election, which he lost, was ârigged.â
But after talking up his tariff plans, sharing his successes from his first 100 days in office and bashing the media, Trump turned back to the graduates, offering 10 pieces of advice drawn from his life and career, such as âThink of yourself as a winner,â âBe an originalâ and âNever, ever give up.â
He told them they were never too young to be successful and described how he worked on his first hotel development deal in his 20s.
âNow is the time to work harder than youâve ever worked before,â he said. âFind your limits and then smash through everything.â
Although Trump described the speech as a commencement address, it is actually a special event that was created before graduation ceremonies that begin Friday. Graduating students had the option of attending the event.
Former Crimson Tide football coach Nick Saban also spoke, regaling the audience with a story about visiting the Oval Office in 2018 during Trump’s first term. Saban said Trump was a gracious host.
In his remarks Thursday, Trump noted that he was marking his 100th day in office and touted the plummeting levels of arrests at the southern U.S. border as evidence that his immigration policies were working. But he accused the courts of trying to stop him from fulfilling the promises he made on the campaign trail.
âJudges are interfering, supposedly based on due process,â he said. âBut how can you give due process to people who came into our country illegally?â
Trump has a long history of injecting such rhetoric into his remarks at venues where traditional political talk was seen as unseemly.
On his first full day in office in 2017, he used a speech at a memorial for fallen CIA agents to complain about journalists and defend the size of his crowd at the inauguration. Later that year, he drew backlash for talking about politics at a Boy Scouts gathering. And earlier this year, he delivered a grievance-filled speech at the Justice Department where he threatened to âexposeâ his enemies.
Ahead of Trump’s arrival, Emily Appel, a 22-year-old advertising major from Norcross, Georgia, called Trump’s appearance at her school âa cherry on topâ of her college years.
She said she hoped he had a message to share that was “positive about us being able to work in the real world and for our future.â
Sophie Best, who is graduating with a communications degree, said, âI donât think that we could have had a greater person come to speak.”
The 21-year-old from Cartersville, Georgia, said she attended Trump’s first presidential inauguration in 2017 when she was a freshman in high school, along with her father, who she said loves Trump.
âI think that no matter what political party or whatever you believe in, I think that itâs super cool that we get to experience and make history and be a part of this,â she said.
At a park a mile away, hundreds of people gathered at a counter-rally hosted by College Democrats. One-time presidential candidate Beto OâRourke of Texas and former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones, the last Democrat to hold statewide office in Alabama, addressed the attendees at their event, called a âTide Against Trumpâ â a play on the universityâs nickname.
Aidan Meyers, a 21-year-old junior studying biology at the university, said he was upset by the decision to let Trump speak at a graduation-related event.
âI felt betrayed that the university was willing to put up with someone who has made it clear that they hate academia, essentially holding funding above universities’ heads as a bargaining chip, unless they bow down to what he wants, which is kind of a hallmark sign with fascist regime,â Meyers said.
O’Rourke told the rally that Trump was trying to make the studentsâ graduation âall about him, true to form.â He urged students and others gathered to go out and use their voices to âwin America back.â
âThe power of people works in this country, even against Donald Trump,â OâRourke said.
Jones told the crowd they were there ânot just as a protest, but as a movement.â
âYou are here today because youâre concerned, youâre afraid. You understand that this countryâs great democracy is teetering right now with what weâre seeing going on,â the former senator said.
Trumpâs presence also drew criticism from the Alabama NAACP, which said his policies are hurting universities and students, particularly students of color.
After his stop in Alabama, Trump is scheduled to travel to Florida for a long weekend at his Mar-a-Lago resort.
Later this month, he is scheduled to give the commencement address at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York.