Top Oversight Committee Dem seeks 'full account' from Army secretary on Arlington incident
Rep. Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, demanded Friday a "full account" of a reported incident between Donald Trump and his campaign and their collective appearance this week at Arlington National Cemetery.
Trump and his campaign faced intense backlash following a reported physical altercation with a cemetery official and faced questions over whether they may have violated federal law banning campaign materials from being photographed or filmed in certain sections of the cemetery.
A TikTok video showed Trump in Section 60, where the altercation purportedly occurred, smiling and giving a thumbs-up. Trump has said the family of a soldier laid to rest in the section invited him, and his campaign has said they were allowed to ring a photographer.
"The fact is that a private photographer was permitted on the premises and for whatever reason an unnamed individual, clearly suffering from a mental health episode, decided to physically block members of President Trump's team during a very solemn ceremony," spokesman Steven Cheung said in the statement.
Now, Raskin wants to get to the bottom of what happened and whether any laws were violated.
In a letter to Christine Wormuth, secretary of the Army, Raskin referenced reports of a "verbal and physical altercation" between members of the Trump campaign and cemetery staff.
"It appears that the Trump campaign refused to abide by Arlington National Cemetery's absolute prohibition on 'filming for partisan, political, or fundraising purposes' and 'abruptly pushed aside' Cemetery staff trying to 'ensure adherence' to these rules," he said in the letter obtained by Punchbowl News.
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In doing so, he asked the Army secretary to hand the committee an incident report and deliver a briefing on what happened, "including whether Trump campaign staff violated federal law or Cemetery rules and whether the Trump campaign informed the families of servicemembers buried at the Cemetery that their gravestones would be used in Mr. Trump's political campaign ads."
Raskin later said that while Trump was at the cemetery for a wreath-laying event, it appeared his campaign arrived with a photographer and videographer and "completely flouted the laws and rules they were informed of and filmed footage in the restricted area for use in a political Tik Tok video."
To boot, he said, campaign staffers also "allegedly engaged" in an altercation with a cemetery staffer who tried to enforce rules "aimed at preserving the sanctity and nonpartisan character of the Cemetery."