At a hospital in El Paso, Texas where survivors of a mass shooting were being treated, President Donald Trump and Melania Trump posed for a photo with a baby who was orphaned after a white nationalist fired an AK-47-style rifle at Walmart shoppers. Standing beside the First Lady who was cradling the baby, the President held up his thumb and beamed at the camera. The widely-circulated photo has been labeled a “wretched, shameful display.” Others have called President Trump and his wife the “surrogate angels of death.”
In our latest tweet thread, we discuss that photo and the visual PR that came out of the President’s hospital visits in El, Paso Texas and Dayton, Ohio following the mass shootings that occurred there the second week of August.
1/ A photographic look at the Trump visit to University Medical Center in #ElPaso. He visited there after the 7th worst #massshooting in US history. Targeting #Latinos, the attack killed at least 22 and injured 26. Pictures from Dayton included. pic.twitter.com/un44Or9kmr
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Many people blamed President Trump’s rhetoric for enabling and fueling the domestic terror attack. The shooter had specifically targeted Latinos as emphasized in a manifesto published online just prior to the rampage.
In response, Trump turned the tragedy into a photo opportunity to further his agenda and counter the criticism that his policies and his demeanor might have contributed in any way.
10/ But stated or unstated, what underlined the visit to #ElPaso and #Dayton was Trump’s divisive policies, his winks-and-nods to #whitenationalism, and the fallout. Billed as support, the trip was more damage control. pic.twitter.com/ZA7VA86tnL
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
All of the survivors who were recovering at the hospital in El Paso refused to see the President. According to The Washington Post, the two who met with him were already discharged. (The irony here is that all of this was happening while victims might have been avoiding hospitals after the attack because of the fear of possibly being arrested by ICE agents.)
So the White House made up the difference by posting more photos. It should be noted that the White House barred reporters from both hospital visits, so its own handout photos, shaped to the President’s agenda, were the only record to go on.
6/ Because the number of survivors willing to return was so scarce, however, the @WhiteHouse #photographers and #videographers worked every angle. This survivor and her family alone earned six pictures. pic.twitter.com/cPWou4ywmQ
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Trump’s attention quickly shifted from the survivors to his supporters.
8/ Mostly though, Trump turned the ward, and the aftermath of the massacre, into a paparazzi moment and a mini-rally with hospital staff. Unfortunately, a cell phone video of Trump bragging about his popularity also got out. (Shealah Craighead/White House). pic.twitter.com/05ni6pWhuG
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
8/ Mostly though, Trump turned the ward, and the aftermath of the massacre, into a paparazzi moment and a mini-rally with hospital staff. Unfortunately, a cell phone video of Trump bragging about his popularity also got out. (Shealah Craighead/White House). pic.twitter.com/05ni6pWhuG
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
At the hospital in Dayton, Ohio, the President and First Lady followed a similar script.
13/ Trump’s day started in Dayton. Hours after the El Paso shooting, a gunman killed 10 there. Talking ethnicity & race, 6 of the 8 killed were black in a district 40% black. Random or not, Trump took hospital photos with 3 Dayton survivors, all white. (Andrea Hanks/White House) pic.twitter.com/wpUHvAzg6R
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
But the role that survivors played in the President’s political show was most obvious in the El Paso photos.
15/ In El Paso though, Latino children were clearly used as props. As the @WhiteHouse captured these children in the advancing hands of the First Lady, you could call it a PR version of family separation. (Andrea Hanks/White House) pic.twitter.com/IAKfi4RgTF
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
16/ Which brings us to the most concerning visual of all: the Trump’s use of the infant, Paul Anchondo. The photo circulated widely but the backstory, not as much. pic.twitter.com/rVY25ZDAQM
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Shielding their son from the bullets, Paul Anchondo’s parents died for him. This is a quick rundown of what led to that picture:
18/ Tito Anchondo, the slain father’s brother, sat down with NPR 2 days later. Describing the family as conservative and pro-Trump, he made an appeal for a meeting. He said he wanted to see if Trump was genuine, shared his pain, and felt remorse for statements that he’s made. pic.twitter.com/ZPjJ464Ebh
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
21/ Then Melania posted it to her social media on Thursday morning. Clearly, the White House had jumped at the opportunity. pic.twitter.com/sBcJnZxCsw
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Once the photo of the Anchondo baby showed up in Melania’s Trump’s Twitter and Instagram feeds, it quickly became the marquee image of the hospital visit. Many on social media were horrified by the photo.
22/ Late Thursday evening, the photo showed up with 21 new images posted to WH Flickr. Of all the family photos from El Paso, the Achonda’s earned the most, a full six pictures. (Andrea Hanks/White House) pic.twitter.com/KHF8jPYKbV
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Although media and social media focused on the one Anchondo portrait, we looked at the entire set.
23/ Across the 6, you can see how much the Trumps fetishized the infant. Upon meeting Paul, you’d expect the Trumps, or anyone else, would be filled with grief for the baby, the dead parents, and the unspeakable horror. But there’s no hint of that whatsoever. (Andrea Hanks/WH.) pic.twitter.com/e3R3gZodG6
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
In the photo below, we see a close-up of Paul Anchondo’s bandaged hand, which was broken during the shooting.
24/ Melania’s concern for the hand and the close up of the bandage are telling. These photos serve to separate the physical from the emotional. The Trumps are concrete like that. The surface becomes everything. (Andrea Hanks/White House) pic.twitter.com/u56W1fQwOK
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
25/ Photographs of Trump being photographed are staples of this White House. The tone here is striking though, as the solemness of the grandparents is offset by Tito’s and Vibora’s smile. If partly partisan, Trump’s need to be mirrored is the greater reason. (Andrea Hanks/WH) pic.twitter.com/UPsUV4Oaql
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
These elements are easy to miss, but the details reveal relevant nuances of this presidency.
26/ Notice how Tito’s shirt, sporting family business where he works w his father, disappears into Trump. They didn’t take one day off after the tragedy because they need the income. As much as Tito yearns to connect with Trump, he might as well be invisible. (Andrea Hanks/WH) pic.twitter.com/5BKBKLHTsA
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
The portrait of Paul is insensitive at best and obscene at worst. Across the board, these White House photos demonstrate political opportunism in the face of horror and tragedy.
27/ Finally, no matter that Paul turns away, possession is all. Even better is Trump’s “thumbs up” in contrast with Paul’s damaged hand. What excruciating irony—Paul, superficially wounded, but altered for life as the result of Trump’s signaling. (Andrea Hanks/WH) pic.twitter.com/3T16BaUkRK
— Reading The Pictures (@ReadingThePix) August 12, 2019
Photo: Andrea Hanks/Official White House Photo. Caption: First Lady Melania Trump holds the two-month-old son of Jordan and Andre Anchondo, as she and President Donald J. Trump pose for photos and meet members of the Anchondo family Wednesday, Aug. 7, 2019, at the University Medical Center of El Paso in El Paso, Texas. Jordan and Andre Anchondo were among the 22 people killed in a mass shooting Saturday at a Walmart in El Paso.
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