Students outraged after Melania Trump given 'Woman of Distinction' award

First lady has focused her efforts on a 'Be Best' campaign, discouraging cyberbullying and opioid abuse

Clark Mindock
New York
Thursday 20 February 2020 00:22 GMT
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Rush Limbaugh given Medal of Freedom by Melania Trump during State of the Union.mp4

Some students and alumni have pushed back after first lady Melania Trump was awarded the 2020 “Woman of Distinction” award from Palm Beach Atlantic University, highlighting a divide at the Christian school just a short drive from Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.

The first lady, who recently changed her formal address to that Florida resort in West Palm Beach, said that she was “grateful” to accept the award, which the school’s website said is given to those “who cherish community and family and want to preserve these ideals for others”.

“As the first lady of the United States, it is a great honor to serve the people of this incredible country,” Ms Trump said at the school’s annual Women of Distinction luncheon, where she also discussed her Be Best campaign that purports to take on cyberbullying and opioid abuse among the nation’s children.

“When we teach our children to cherish our values and care for each other, they are better prepared to carry on Americans’ legacy of compassion, service and patriotism,” she said. It is “our duty as adults and parents” to give children the best opportunities in life.

Proceeds from that luncheon will go toward scholarships for female students. The university said in an announcement that it chose the first lady — the first since starting the program in 1991 — as an “emphasis on encouraging the potential of each person aligns with Mrs Trump’s platform as First Lady.”

But students and some alumni have pushed back.

“This award has historically gone to women whose character and impact in Palm Beach has shaped the culture of our home, and I have not been convinced that the first lady's character or impact here is worthy of that recognition,“ Graysen Boehning, a senior at the school, told The Hill.

“While many students were excited that the school was bringing in the first lady of the United States to speak, others felt that her character was not representative of the community of love for people of all backgrounds and beliefs that PBA houses and fosters,” he said.

Tyler Whitehead, the president of the school’s College Democrats, said in a statement that the organisation was “displeased and confused”.

“The vast majority of students and faculty that I have spoken to about the decision were disappointed by what seems to be a politically-motivated move on the university's part,” he said.

Bill Fleming, the president of the university, told the Palm Beach Post meanwhile that he had “enthusiastically” accepted the board’s recommendation, and that it was “the honorable thing to do”.

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