By Tim Reid and JC Whittington WASHINGTON (Reuters) -In some neighborhoods of heavily Democratic Washington, Halloween displays with a decidedly political tone have long been a tradition. Nine months into Republican President Donald Trump’s second term, some residents are staging anti-Trump yard displays prompted in part by his administration’s budget cuts, job layoffs and norm-breaking […]
Politics
Washington Halloween displays show scariest thing for Democrats is Trump
Audio By Carbonatix
By Tim Reid and JC Whittington
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -In some neighborhoods of heavily Democratic Washington, Halloween displays with a decidedly political tone have long been a tradition.
Nine months into Republican President Donald Trump’s second term, some residents are staging anti-Trump yard displays prompted in part by his administration’s budget cuts, job layoffs and norm-breaking policies. This Halloween also coincides with one of the longest government shutdowns in U.S. history.
In a front yard close to the U.S. Capitol, Donna Breslin, 79, has installed an entire graveyard with 16 headstones to mark policy moves Trump has made since he took office in January that she says are killing off American democracy.
There are headstones – purchased on Amazon and hand-painted by Breslin – for “USAID,” and “research for health and science,” among others.
The headstones are references to Trump administration cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development and health research, both part of his broader effort to shrink the federal bureaucracy.
Reuters journalists visited two neighborhoods in Washington – Georgetown and Capitol Hill, known for their politically themed displays – over two days and did not find any pro-Trump or anti-Democratic Halloween decorations.
The Washington metropolitan area has borne the brunt of Trump’s cuts. Civil servants have been furloughed because of the shutdown with each party blaming the other. In the city proper, around 90% of voters are registered Democrats.
Trump defends the cuts as necessary to reduce a bloated and inefficient workforce. He rejects the notion that his actions test the limits of the presidency and undermine democracy, saying he is simply delivering on his campaign agenda.
IT’S ‘POINTLESS VIRTUE SIGNALING,’ SAYS WHITE HOUSE
Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, said Democrats were engaged in “pointless virtue signaling” with their anti-Trump Halloween displays.
The White House is also using Halloween to mock its opponents, posting images on Instagram of costumes depicting Democratic leaders — and a separate one of Trump himself with the message, “Not included – crown.”
This would appear to be a White House effort to make light of the “No Kings” protests by tens of thousands of Americans this month to oppose what they view as authoritarian tendencies in Trump’s leadership.
One focus of this year’s Halloween displays is Trump’s health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has cut staff at the Department of Health and Human Services and promoted debunked claims that routine childhood vaccines cause harm.
In the wealthy, liberal Northwest Washington neighborhood of Georgetown, where Kennedy lives, there are multiple skeletons on display in front yards alongside vaccine-related messages.
A block from Kennedy’s house stands a giant 10-foot (3-meter)-tall skeleton next to a sign that reads, “Hi, I’m Wally! Vaccines save lives – believe me I know!”
Kennedy has restricted access to COVID-19 shots, boosted support for state vaccine exemptions, dismantled the vaccine review process, and expanded a national advisory board with like-minded critics of COVID shots.
An HHS spokesman said in a statement, “Let’s be clear: Secretary Kennedy is not anti-vaccine — he is pro-safety, pro-transparency, and pro-accountability. His longstanding advocacy has focused on ensuring that vaccines and all medical interventions meet the highest standards of safety and are backed by gold standard science.”
In another Georgetown front yard, a skeleton dangles over a fence with a stethoscope around its neck, next to a sign reading, “Secretary of Sick.”
Close to Kennedy’s house, Christine Payne, 66, has placed a child-sized skeleton in her front window with the message, “Wish I had taken my vaccine!”
Payne said while she didn’t agree with his policies, Kennedy was a good neighbor.
“I think we all need to speak out with what’s going on in this nation at the moment, especially in Washington,” Payne said. “We’re very political here.”
(Reporting by Tim Reid and JC Whittington, Editing by Ross Colvin and Howard Goller)
