Donald Trump speaks to graduating students at Alabama amid protests
Trump's remarks in Tuscaloosa are the Republican president's first address to graduates in his second term and come as he has been celebrating the first 100 days of his administration
AP Tuscaloosa (US)
President Donald Trump was addressing graduating students at the University of Alabama on Thursday, a visit that drew hundreds of protesters to an off-campus rally.
Trump's remarks in Tuscaloosa are the Republican president's first address to graduates in his second term and come as he has been celebrating the first 100 days of his administration. The previously scheduled visit came shortly after he announced a shake-up to his national security team, with Mike Waltz being tapped for United Nations ambassador and Secretary of State Marco Rubio taking over Waltz's national security adviser role on an interim basis.
What a nice looking group this is, Trump said to open his speech. There's nowhere I'd rather be than Tuscaloosa.
Alabama, where Trump won a commanding 64 per cent of the vote in 2024, is where he has staged a number of his trademark large rallies over the past decade. It is also where Trump showed early signs of strength in his first presidential campaign when he began filling stadiums for his rallies.
While Trump has described the speech as a commencement address, it is actually a special event that was created before graduation ceremonies that begin Friday. Graduating students have 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.
Ahead of the president's arrival, cap-and-gown-wearing graduates and their families began filing into the arena where Trump was set to speak. Many seemed excited about the prospect of seeing him in person.
Emily Appel, a 22-year-old advertising major from Norcross, Georgia, called Trump's appearance at their school a cherry on top of her college years.
I think it's such an honour, no matter who the president is. I think this is a huge honour to have the president of the United States speaking to our school," Appel said.
She called Trump a very influential person and 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.
Sophie Best, who is graduating with a communications degree, said, I don't 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.
I think that no matter what political party or whatever you believe in, I think that it's super cool that we get to experience and make history and be a part of this, she said.
At a park several miles away, hundreds of people gathered at a counter rally hosted by College Democrats. One-time presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke of Texas and former US Senator Doug Jones, the last Democrat to hold statewide office in Alabama, addressed the rally, called a Tide Against Trump a play on the university's nickname.
Aidan Meyers, a 21-year-old junior studying biology at the university, said he felt betrayed by the decision to let Trump speak at a graduation-related event.
I 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, Meyers said.
He said he also feels betrayed by the administration's stance on science and research. A fellowship he was seeking at the National Institutes of Health was canceled because of the federal hiring freeze, he said.
O'Rourke told the rally that Trump was trying to make the students' graduation all about him, true to form. He urged students and others gathered to go out and use their voices to win America back.
The power of people works in this country, even against Donald Trump, O'Rourke said.
Jones told the crowd they were there not just as a protest, but as a movement.
You are here today because you're concerned, you're afraid. You understand that this country's great democracy is teetering right now with what we're seeing going on, the former senator said.
Ahead of the rally, O'Rourke praised the students who invited him as inspiring and said their efforts in a Republican-dominated state like Alabama are an example for the rest of the country.
You cannot be too red or too rural or too Republican to be written off right now. You also can't be too blue or too liberal to be taken for granted, O'Rourke told The Associated Press after arriving in Tuscaloosa. You've got to show up absolutely everywhere. We truly are in crisis.
Trump's presence has also drawn criticism from the Alabama NAACP, which said his policies are hurting universities and students, particularly students of color.
Trump's visit to Alabama is his second trip this week. He held a rally in Michigan on Tuesday to mark 100 days in office.
Outside of weekend trips for personal visits, the president has not made many official trips since taking office on January 20. He usually speaks to the public from the impromptu news conferences he holds in the Oval Office and at other events at the White House.
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 US Military Academy in West Point, New York.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
27 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Marines chopper spotted in Los Angeles? Video surfaces amid reports of fresh deployment
A video circulating on social media showed a helicopter, resembling the Marine chopper, flying over Los Angeles as citywide anti-ICE protests continued on Monday. However, neither President Donald Trump nor the White House have confirmed if the force was deployed. National Guard troops were deployed in LA over the weekend. This comes as CNN cited three sources to report that roughly 500 Marines based out of the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in California have been mobilized to respond to the protests. The publication further added that the Marines will join the National Guard troops. ABC News cited an official to report a much higher number. The network reported that 700 marines have been ordered to assist in Los Angeles and they're expected to arrive over the next 24 hours. The media outlet said that the Marines are from the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines at Twentynine Palms, California, who US Northern Command had said Sunday were on a 'prepared to deploy status'. President Donald Trump was meanwhile asked if he planned on sending Marines to LA. "We'll see what happens. I mean, I think we have it very well under control. I think it would have been a very bad situation. It was heading in the wrong direction. It's now heading in the right direction,' he said on Monday.


Hindustan Times
42 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
IAEA chief relays Iran warning against Israeli strikes on nuclear facilities
CAIRO, - International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said Iranians warned him that an Israel strike on the country's nuclear facilities could cause Iran to be more determined about developing a nuclear weapon, according to an interview broadcast and published on Monday. 'A strike could potentially have an amalgamating effect, solidifying Iran's determination – I will say it plainly – to pursue a nuclear weapon or withdraw from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,' Grossi said in the interview, published on the Jerusalem Post website and broadcast on i24NEWS TV on Monday. Grossi, however, doubted that Israel would strike Tehran's nuclear facilities, the Jerusalem Post reported. The Iranian nuclear program "runs wide and deep," Grossi told the Jerusalem Post. "Disrupting them would require overwhelming and devastating force." Tehran and Washington have recently engaged in Oman-mediated nuclear talks. Iran is set to hand a counter-proposal for a nuclear deal to the United States via Oman, Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said on Monday, in response to a U.S. offer that Tehran deems "unacceptable". Last week, U.S. President Donald Trump said he had warned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to take actions that could disrupt nuclear talks with Iran. "I told him this would be inappropriate to do right now because we're very close to a solution now," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. "That could change at any moment." Trump and Netanyahu are expected to speak over the phone on Monday.


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Trump Calls Iran ‘Tough' Negotiators, Briefed Israel on Talks
President Donald Trump said he discussed the ongoing Iran nuclear negotiations with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call on Monday, indicating he was worried Tehran was asking for too much in negotiations. 'They are good negotiators, but they're tough. Sometimes they can be too tough, that's the problem,' Trump said at an event at the White House. 'So we're trying to make a deal so that there's no destruction and death.' Trump has vowed to stop Tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons but Netanyahu has been skeptical of diplomatic efforts to curb Iran's nuclear ambitions. Trump in May said he told Netanyahu that a military strike against Iran would be 'inappropriate to do right now' because it could jeopardize negotiations he said were close to an agreement. The New York Times had reported that Israel was weighing potential strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, a move officials in Tehran have warned could trigger a response and derail the talks. Tensions are already high between Israel and Iran since the start of the war in Gaza and amid Israeli strikes on Iran-backed groups. A spokesman for Iran's foreign ministry during a press conference earlier Monday said Tehran would send a counteroffer in the 'coming days' via Oman in response to a US proposal on its nuclear program. The war in Gaza is also another flashpoint that is high on the agenda, following Israel's move to intensify military operations against Hamas. Israel has been at war with Hamas since Oct. 7, 2023, when the group — declared a terrorist organization by the US and European Union — launched a surprise attack that killed about 1,200 people and resulted in 250 hostages being taken. More than 50 of those captives remain in Gaza, and Israel believes about 20 are alive. Trump said the situation in Gaza was among the discussion points on the call. 'We discussed a lot of things, and it went very well, very smooth,' Trump said. Israel's response aimed at rooting out Hamas from Gaza has destroyed much of the territory and sparked a humanitarian crisis. Israel controls limited deliveries of aid assistance to Gaza's population, which numbers about 2 million, and has blamed Hamas for diverting needed aid under a prior distribution system. The war has also sparked a surge in antisemitic violence in the US, including an attack with Molotov cocktails and a flamethrower on peaceful demonstrators in Colorado who were marching in support of Israeli hostages in Gaza. Trump's administration has seized on worries about antisemitism, including the wave of campus protests over the war, pressuring universities to overhaul their policies. And Trump last week unveiled a new travel ban that, citing the terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, as justification for his administration's hardline immigration policies and ramped-up deportations. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.