Speaker 1 (13:44):
President, welcome.
Trump (13:45):
Thank you very much. Thank you. I'd like to request a moment of silence for the victims and their families. Please. Thank you very much. I speak to you this morning in an hour of anguish for our nation. Just before 9:00 PM last night, an American Airlines regional jet carrying 60 passengers and four crew collided with an army Blackhawk helicopter carrying three military service members over the Potomac River in Washington, DC while on final approach to Reagan National Airport. Both aircraft crashed instantly and were immediately submerged into the icy waters of the Potomac. Real tragedy.
(14:58)
The massive search and rescue mission was underway throughout the night, leveraging every asset at our disposal. And I have to say, the local state, federal military, including the United States Coast Guard in particular, they've done a phenomenal job. So quick, so fast, it was mobilized immediately. The work has now shifted to a recovery mission. Sadly, there are no survivors.
(15:29)
This was a dark and excruciating night in our nation's capital and in our nation's history and a tragedy of terrible proportions. As one nation, we grieve for every precious soul that has been taken from us so suddenly, and we are a country of really, we are in mourning. This is really shaking a lot of people, including people very sadly, from other nations who were on the flight.
(15:58)
For the family members back in Wichita, Kansas, here in Washington, DC and throughout the United States and in Russia. We have a Russia contingent of very talented people unfortunately were on that plane, very, very, very sorry about that, whose loved ones were aboard the passenger jet. We can only begin to imagine the agony that you are all feeling. Nothing worse.
(16:24)
On behalf of the First Lady, myself and 340 million Americans, our friends are shattered alongside yours and our prayers are with you now and in the days to come. We'll be working very, very diligently in the days to come. We're here for you to wipe away the tears and to offer you our devotion, our love and our support. It's great support. In moments like this, the differences between Americans fade to nothing compared to the bonds of affection and loyalty that unite us all, both as Americans and even as nations. We are one family, and today we are all heartbroken. We're all searching for answers.
(17:05)
That icy, icy Potomac. It was a cold, cold night, cold water. We're all overcome with the grief. For many who have so tragically perished, who will no longer be with us. Together, we take solace in the knowledge that their journey ended not in the cold waters of the Potomac, but in the warm embrace of a loving God. We do not know what led to this crash, but we have some very strong opinions and ideas, and I think we'll probably state those opinions now because over the years I've watched as things like this happen and they say, "Well, we're always investigating." And then the investigation, three years later, they announce it. "We think we have some pretty good ideas." But we'll find out how this disaster occurred and will ensure that nothing like this ever happens again.
(17:55)
The FAA and the NTSB and the US military will be carrying out a systematic and comprehensive investigation. Our new Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy, his second day on the job when that happened, it's a rough one, will be working tirelessly. He's a great gentleman. The whole group is. These are great people and they are working tirelessly to figure out exactly what happened. We will state certain opinions, however. I'm also immediately appointing an acting Commissioner to the FAA, Christopher Rochelieu, a twenty-two-year veteran of the agency, highly respected. Christopher, thank you very much. Appreciate it.
(18:42)
We must have only the highest standards for those who work in our aviation system. I changed the Obama standards from very mediocre at best to extraordinary. You remember that. Only the highest aptitude, they have to be the highest intellect and psychologically superior people were allowed to qualify for air traffic controllers. That was not so prior to getting there. When I arrived in 2016, I made that change very early on because I always felt this was a job that -- and other jobs too- but this was a job that had to be superior intelligence and we didn't really have that and we had it.
(19:27)
And then when I left office and Biden took over, he changed them back to lower than ever before. I put safety first, Obama Biden and the Democrats put policy first and they put politics at a level that nobody's ever seen because this was the lowest level. Their policy was horrible and their politics was even worse. So as you know, last week long before the crash, I signed an executive order restoring our highest standards for air traffic controllers and other important jobs throughout the country. So it was very interesting. About a week ago, almost upon entering office, I signed something last week, that was an executive order, very powerful on restoring the highest standards of air traffic controllers and others, by the way. Then my administration will set the highest possible bar for aviation safety. We have to have our smartest people. It doesn't matter what they look like, how they speak, who they are. It matters - intellect, talent. The word talent. You have to be talented, naturally talented geniuses. You can't have regular people doing that job. They won't be able to do it.
(20:48)
But we'll restore faith in American air travel. I'll have more to say about that. I do want to point out that various articles that appeared prior to my entering office, and here's one. The FAA's diversity push includes focus on hiring people with severe intellectual and psychiatric disabilities. That is amazing. And then it says, FAA says, people with severe disabilities are most underrepresented segment of the workforce and they want them in and they want them . They can be air traffic controllers. I don't think so. This was in January 14th, so that was a week before I entered office. They put a big push to put diversity into the FAA's program.
(21:40)
Then another article, the Federal Aviation Administration, --. This was before I got to office. Recently. Second term. The FAA is actively recruiting workers who suffer severe intellectual disabilities, psychiatric problems, and other mental and physical conditions under a diversity and inclusion hiring initiative spelled out on the agency's website. Can you imagine? These are people that are … I mean actually their lives are shortened because of the stress that they have.
(22:18)
Brilliant people have to be in those positions and their lives are actually shortened, very substantially shortened because of the stress. Where you have many, many planes coming into one target and you need a very special talent and a very special genius to be able to do it. Targeted disabilities are those disabilities at the federal government as a matter of policy, as identified for special emphasis in recruitment and hiring, the FAA's website states. They include hearing, vision, missing extremities, partial paralysis, complete paralysis, epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability and dwarfism all qualify for the position of a controller of airplanes pouring into our country, pouring into a little spot, a little dot on the map, a little runway.
(23:15)
The initiative is part of the FAA's Diversity and inclusion hiring plan. Think of that. The initiative is part of the FAA's Diversity and Inclusion hiring plan, which says diversity is integral to achieving FAA's mission of ensuring safe and efficient travel. I don't think so. I don't think so. I think it's just the opposite. The FAA website shows that the agency's guidance on diversity hiring were last updated on March 23rd of '22. They wanted to make it even more.
(23:46)
And then I came in and I assume maybe this is the reason, the FAA, which is overseen by Secretary Pete Buttigieg, a real winner. That's the guy's a real winner. Do you know how badly everything's run since he's run this Department of Transportation? He's a disaster. He was a disaster as a mayor. He ran his city into the ground and he's a disaster now. He's just got a good line of bullshit. The Department of Transportation, his government agency charged with regulating civil aviation while he runs it, 45,000 people and he is run it right into the ground with his diversity. So I had to say that it's terrible.
(24:32)
Then it's a group within the FAA, another story determined that the workforce was too white. That they had concerted efforts to get the administration to change that and to change it immediately. This was in the Obama administration just prior to my getting there. And we took care of African Americans, Hispanic Americans. We took care of everybody at levels that nobody's ever seen before. It's one of the reasons I won. But they actually came out with a directive, too white. And we want the people that are competent.
(25:10)
But now we mourn and we pray and would like to ask all Americans to join me in a moment of silence as we ask God to watch over those who have lost their lives and bring comfort to the loved ones.
(25:22)
And I just want to say, God bless everyone in this room. This has been a terrible, very short period of time. We'll get to the bottom of it. So we all saw the same thing. We've seen it many times. I've had the honor of hearing tapes. Tapes are scary, very scary tapes. You had a airliner coming in, American Airlines. He was doing everything right. He was on track. He was the same track as everybody else. They came in, it's probably the same track as they've had for 25 years or more.
Trump (26:01):
He's coming in the path and, for some reason, you had a helicopter that was at the same height, obviously when they hit, but pretty much the same height and going at an angle that was unbelievably bad when the air traffic controller said, "Do you see?" He was talking about do you see him? But there was very little time left when that was stated. And then also he said, "Follow him in." And then almost immediately after that, seconds after that, there was the crash that took place. Well, you follow him in, that means like everything's fine. Follow him in.
(26:46)
You had a pilot problem from the standpoint of the helicopter, I mean, because it was visual. It was a very clear night. It was cold, but clear and clear as you could be. The American Airlines plane had lights blazing. They had all of their landing lights on.
(27:08)
I could see it from the Kennedy Center tape. We had a tape up on the Kennedy Center. That seems to be the primary. That's why I'm sure we'll see other tapes, because it's such an area where there are a lot of cameras, a lot of cameras looking up into the air, into space. So we'll probably see many other shots of it before too much time goes by.
(27:28)
But we had a situation where you had a helicopter that had the ability to stop. I have helicopters. You can stop a helicopter very quickly. It had the ability to go up or down. It had the ability to turn and the turn it made was not the correct turn, obviously, and it did somewhat the opposite of what it was told. We don't know that that would've been the difference because the timing was so tight. It was so little. There was so little time to think.
(28:03)
But what you did have is you had vision. The helicopter had vision of the plane because you had vision of it all the way, perfect vision of it, all the way from, at Kennedy Center where the tape was taken and, for some reason, there weren't adjustments made.
(28:20)
Again, you could have slowed down the helicopter substantially. You could have stopped the helicopter. You could have gone up. You could have gone down. You could have gone straight up, straight down. You could have turned, you could have done a million different maneuvers. For some reason, it just kept going and then made a slight turn at the very end and, by that time, it was too late.
(28:45)
They shouldn't have been at the same height because if it was at the same height, you could have gone under it or over it and nobody realized, or they didn't say that it's at the same height. At the same height, it still wouldn't have been great, but you would've missed it by quite a bit. It could have been a thousand feet higher, it could have been 200 feet lower, but it was exactly at the same height and somebody should've been able to point that out.
(29:09)
So all of this is going to be studied, but it just seems to me from, a couple of words that I like to use, the words common sense, some really bad things happened and some things happened that shouldn't have happened.
(29:26)
So you had a helicopter going in identical direction. You had a helicopter that was at the exact same height as somebody going in essentially the opposite direction. You had a plane that was following a track, which is a track that every other plane followed and I don't imagine, I know I've heard today that they might've been following the preceding plane, which was pretty close, but not that close, the preceding plane. But you wouldn't have even been able to see that because of the direction that the helicopter was coming in at.
(29:57)
So you had a confluence of bad decisions that were made and you have people that lost their lives, violently lost their lives.
(30:12)
We're going to take a few questions. I'd like to ask our new Secretary of Transportation to say a few words, Sean Duffy, great gentleman, just started. It's not your fault, and I know you agree with me very strongly on intellect and even psychological well- being of the air traffic control.
(30:32)
It's such an important position, and I think I can't emphasize stronger. I changed it. When I first ran in 2016, I changed it. We had the highest standard that you could have, and then they changed it back, that was Biden, to a standard you just… I read it to you. That was from one of your papers. One of the people in this room actually wrote that. And then I changed it back a few days ago and, unfortunately, that was… We'll see. We don't know that necessarily it's even the controller's fault.
(31:10)
But one thing we do know, there was a lot of vision and people should've been able to see that at what point do you stop? At what point do you say, "Wow, that plane's getting a little bit close?" So this is a tragedy that should not have happened. Please.
Sean Duffy (31:27):
Thank you, Mr. President. And I would just note the President's leadership has been remarkable during this crisis. We have had a whole of government response, local, state, federal, and when you see that kind of cooperation, it begins with the leadership in this body. So thank you for that, Mr. President. You make our jobs a lot easier.
(31:49)
You made an important point that when we deal with safety, we can only accept the best and the brightest in positions of safety that impact the lives of our loved ones, our family members. And I think you make a really important point on that, Mr. President. That is the motto of your presidency, the best and the brightest, the most intelligent coming into these spaces.
(32:12)
I want to take a moment and extend my condolences to the families of the loved ones. We commit to them that we are going to get to the bottom of this investigation, not in three years, not in four years, but as quickly as possible with the NTSB who is here today, as well as the FAA. What happened yesterday shouldn't have happened. It should not have happened. And when Americans take off in airplanes, they should expect to land at their destination. That didn't happen yesterday. That's unacceptable.
(32:45)
And so we will not accept excuses. We will not accept passing the buck. We are going to take responsibility at the Department of Transportation and the FAA to make sure we have the reforms that have been dictated by President Trump in place to make sure that these mistakes do not happen again. And again, I want to thank you for your leadership, Mr. President-
Trump (33:07):
Thank you.
Sean Duffy (33:08):
… and I appreciate the confidence you placed in me. Thank you.
Trump (33:12):
Thank you very much.
(33:14)
Pete, would you like to say something?
Pete (33:19):
Well, thank you, Mr. President.
(33:20)
Again, I want to echo what the transportation secretary said about your leadership. From the moment we found out about this, we were in contact with the White House trying to determine exactly what happened. I would echo it as well. No excuses. We're going to get to the bottom of this.
(33:36)
We, first and foremost, from the Defense Department, want to pass our condolences to the 64 souls and their families that were affected by this. Never should happen. And certainly the three service members, the three soldiers, a young captain, staff sergeant, and the CW-II, Chief Warrant Officer on a routine annual retraining of night flights on a standard corridor for a continuity of government mission. The military does dangerous things. It does routine things on a regular basis.
(34:08)
Tragically, last night a mistake was made, and I think the president is right. There was some sort of an elevation issue that we have immediately begun investigating at the DOD and Army level. Army CID is on the ground investigating. Top-tier aviation assets inside the DOD are investigating, sir, to get to the bottom of it so that it does not happen again because it's absolutely unacceptable.
(34:32)
But I want to echo what the transportation secretary and you, Mr. President, said because it pertains to the DOD as well. We will have the best and brightest in every position possible. As you said in your inaugural, it is colorblind and merit-based. The best leaders possible, whether it's flying Black Hawks and flying airplanes, leading platoons or in government. The era of DEI is gone at the Defense Department and we need the best and brightest, whether it's in our air traffic control or whether it's in our generals or whether it's throughout government.
(35:07)
So thank you for your leadership and courage on that, sir, and we'll stand by you on it. Thank you.
Trump (35:18):
Thank you very much. JD, please?
JD (35:18):
Well, thank you, Mr. President, for your leadership. I just want to reemphasize something the president said and you've heard from the secretary of transportation and of defense. There really was a whole-of-government response. We were all on the phone, we were all communicating yesterday trying to get to the bottom of this immediately, but also try to communicate with the American people about what happened.
(35:35)
Something the president said that I think bears reemphasizing, which is that when you don't have the best standards in who you're hiring, it means, on the one hand, you're not getting the best people in government, but on the other hand, it puts stresses on the people who are already there. And I think that is a core part of what President Trump is going to bring and has already brought to Washington, DC is we want to hire the best people because we want the best people at air traffic control and we want to make sure we have enough people at air traffic control who are actually competent to do the job.
(36:05)
If you go back to just some of the headlines over the past 10 years, you have many hundreds of people suing the government because they would like to be air traffic controllers, but they were turned away because of the color of their skin. That policy ends under Donald Trump's leadership because safety is the first priority of our aviation industry.
(36:22)
Thank you, Mr. President.
Trump (36:22):
Thank you. Thank you, JD.
Press (36:23):
Mr. President.
(36:23)
Mr. President.
(36:23)
Mr. President.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Mr. President, on DEI and the claims that you've made, are you saying this crash was somehow caused and the result of diversity hiring? And what evidence have you seen to support these claims?
Trump (36:36):
It just could have been. We have a high standard, we've had a much higher standard than anybody else, and there are things where you have to go by brainpower, you have to go by psychological quality and psychological quality is a very important element of it. These are various, very powerful tests that we put to use and they were terminated by Biden, and Biden went by a standard that's the exact opposite. So we don't know.
(37:02)
But we do know that you had two planes at the same level. You had a helicopter and a plane. That shouldn't have happened. And we'll see. We're going to look into that and we're going to see.
(37:11)
But certainly for an air traffic controller, we want the brightest, the smartest, the sharpest. We want somebody that's psychologically superior and that's what we're going to have. Yeah.
Press (37:23):
Mr. President.
(37:23)
Mr. President.
(37:23)
Mr. President.
Trump (37:25):
Yeah, please, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (37:26):
Mr. President, you mentioned at the top of the briefing that there were several Russian nationals on the flight.
Trump (37:32):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (37:32):
Will the US government be willing to facilitate the transfer of their remains considering the fact-
Trump (37:40):
Yes, we will.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
… there is no direct air travel between the two countries?
Trump (37:43):
We've already been in contact with Russia, and the answer is yes, we will facilitate. Yes.
Press (37:51):
Mr. President.
(37:51)
Mr. President.
(37:52)
Mr. President.
Trump (37:52):
Please go ahead.
Speaker 4 (37:54):
Thank you, Mr. President. The situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is getting worse. Even though President Joao Lourenco has been mediating the conflict between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo because he wants to bring peace and stability, the situation is really bad right now.
(38:10)
I want to hear from this president if you have any plan in the future to bring peace in the Democratic Republic-
Trump (38:15):
Well, you're asked to me a question about Rwanda and it is a very serious problem, I agree, but I don't think it's appropriate right now to talk about it. But it is a very serious problem.
Press (38:23):
Mr. President.
(38:23)
Mr. President.
(38:23)
Mr. President.
Speaker 5 (38:24):
We don't yet know the names of the 67 people who were killed, and you are blaming Democrats and DEI policies and air traffic control, and seemingly the member of the US military who was flying that Black Hawk helicopter. Don't you think you're getting ahead of the investigation right now?
Trump (38:38):
No, I don't think so at all. I don't think… What are the names of the people? You mean the names of the people that are on the plane? You think that's going to make a difference? They are-
Speaker 5 (38:47):
[inaudible 00:38:47] for their family [inaudible 00:38:48] any media-
Trump (38:47):
They are a group of people that have lost their lives. If you want a list of the names we can give you that, we'll be giving that very soon. We're in coordination with American Airlines. We're in coordination very strongly, obviously, with the military.
Trump (39:00):
But I think that's not a very smart question. I'm surprised coming from you. Please.
Speaker 6 (39:07):
Thank you President Trump, thank you for being here. Based on your analysis so far, do you have a sense of who was at fault? If it was the plane, the helicopter, air traffic control, and can you assure people that it is safe to fly in and out of D.C.?
Trump (39:19):
Well, I've given you the analysis and the analysis was, it was based on vision. You had a lot of people that saw what was happening. You had some people that knew what was happening. There was some warnings, but the warnings were given very, very late. Those warnings were given very late. It was almost as they were given, a few seconds later there was a crash. It should have been brought up earlier.
(39:45)
But the people in the helicopter should have seen where they were going. I can't imagine people with 20 20 vision not seeing what's happening up there. Again, they shouldn't have been at the same height. You're going in reverse directions or sideway directions. Obviously you want to be at different heights. I see it all the time when I'm flying. You have planes going on the opposite. They're always lower, we're higher or so if somehow there's a screw-up, there's not going to be a tragedy. It'll be close, but there's never going to be a tragedy if you're at a different elevation. For whatever reason, they were at the same elevation.
(40:28)
And also from the American Airlines standard, he's along the track that every plane is along. You say, what was the helicopter doing in that track? It's very sad, but visually, somebody should have been able to see and taken that helicopter out of play and they should have been at a different height.
Speaker 7 (40:50):
Thank you, sir. You mentioned the Russians that were on board that plane. What other nationalities were on board that passenger jet?
Trump (40:56):
There were a couple of others. We're going to be announcing it in about an hour. We have some very specific information. We're calling the countries. We've spoken to most of them, but there were some other countries represented.
crowd (41:07):
Mr. President.
Speaker 8 (41:09):
Have you spoken to President Putin?
Trump (41:12):
I have not. No.
crowd (41:12):
Mr. President.
Trump (41:12):
Not about this.
Speaker 9 (41:12):
Mr President, question if I may? On your executive order, you've already issued an executive order you say will restore aviation safety.
Trump (41:19):
Right.
Speaker 9 (41:19):
This crash happened after that. Was the executive order successful and what more do you need to change to keep people safe?
Trump (41:25):
Well, we issued it three days ago and we were in the process of making those changes. This is something that should have been done a long time ago. Actually, my original order should have never been changed and I think maybe you wouldn't have had this problem. Maybe.
crowd (41:41):
Mr. President.
Trump (41:42):
Please go ahead.
Speaker 10 (41:42):
Yes, thank you. We see everyday life that's very often those diversity hires cause sometimes issues as you just mentioned. So what plan do you have? Are we going to see some fire? Are you going to fire some of those diversity hire in the federal government? What plan do you have?
Trump (42:01):
I would say the answer is yes. If we find that people aren't mentally competent. You see the language. The language is put out by them, and if you see that, I'm not going to bore you by reading it again, but these are not people that should be doing this particular job. They'd be very good for certain jobs, but not people that should be doing this particular job.
crowd (42:24):
Mr. President.
Speaker 11 (42:25):
Mr. President, you have today blamed the diversity elements, but then told us that you weren't sure that the controllers made any mistake. You then said perhaps the helicopter pilots were the ones who made the mistake.
Trump (42:40):
Yeah. It's all under investigation.
Speaker 11 (42:42):
I understand that. That's why I'm trying to figure out how you can come to the conclusion right now that diversity had something to do with this crash.
Trump (42:50):
Because I have common sense and unfortunately a lot of people don't. We want brilliant people doing this. This is a major chess game at the highest level. When you have 60 planes coming in during a short period of time and they're all coming in different directions and you're dealing with very high-level computer work and very complex computers.
(43:15)
And one of the other things I will tell you is that the systems that were built, I was going to rebuild the entire system and then we had an election that didn't turn out the way it should have, but they didn't build the systems properly. They spent a lot of money renovating a system, spending much more money than they would've spent if they bought a new system for air traffic controllers, meaning the computerized systems. There are certain companies that do a very good job. They didn't use those companies. They used companies that should not have been doing it. I think it's very important to understand that for some jobs, and not only this but air traffic controllers, they have to be at the highest level of genius.
crowd (43:56):
Mr. President.
Speaker 12 (43:59):
I want to ask you about the ice skaters in a moment because the U.S. Ice Skating committee was affected, but first, if I can, the cited FAA tax that you read is real, but the implications that this policy is new or that it stems from efforts that began under President Biden nor the transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg is demonstrably false. It's been on the FAA's website-
Trump (44:16):
Who said that, you?
Speaker 12 (44:17):
No, it's on the website, the FAA's website. It was there in 2013. It was there for the entirety-
Trump (44:21):
Take a look. What I read-
Speaker 12 (44:22):
It was there for the entirety of your administration too.
Trump (44:24):
Nice and easy.
Speaker 12 (44:24):
So my question is why didn't you change the policy during your first administration?
Trump (44:28):
I did change it. I changed the Obama policy and we had a very good policy and then Biden came in and he changed it and then when I came in two days, three days ago, I signed a new order bringing it to the highest level of intelligence. Okay.
Speaker 12 (44:41):
It was on the website.
crowd (44:42):
Mr. President.
Trump (44:42):
Please.
Speaker 12 (44:42):
Respectfully, it was on the website.
Trump (44:42):
Quiet. Quiet.
crowd (44:47):
Welcome back to the, I'm sorry.
Speaker 13 (44:48):
You mentioned that a vision was probably the problem that was an issue in this crash. There's been some reports that one of the pilots in the helicopter may be using night vision equipment. Was there any-
Trump (44:59):
I heard that. We don't know. We're going to know that pretty soon. It may change your view plan if you do have the night vision, so it's very possible that could have happened. That would be maybe a reason why you wouldn't actually see as well as on a clear night, you can see sometimes better without it.
crowd (45:17):
Mr. President.
Trump (45:17):
Have a couple of more.
Speaker 14 (45:20):
Mr. President, is it helpful to have your Secretary of Transportation confirmed and does this intensify your interest in getting other nominees confirmed quickly?
Trump (45:29):
What?
Speaker 14 (45:29):
Is it helpful to have your Secretary of transportation confirmed and does this intensify your interest in getting other nominees confirmed quickly as well?
Trump (45:36):
Well, sure. We want fast confirmations and the Democrats, as you know, are doing everything they can to delay them. They've taken too long. We're struggling to get very good people that everybody knows they're going to be confirmed, but we're struggling to get them out faster. We want them out faster. It's a good question actually.
(45:58)
We've been pushing Sean, everyone knows Sean for a long time. He got many, many Democrat votes, but they want to take as long as they can. They ask questions like some of the questions that Peter would ask, that were totally irrelevant and not very good questions, but they want to just keep it going. They want to keep it going as long as possible. I was very honored actually that you got so many Democrat votes. That was really good. That was really good.
crowd (46:25):
Mr. President.
Speaker 15 (46:26):
When are you planning to meet with the families? And second question. Is it your impression that little training that was done during that time?
Trump (46:35):
That what?
Speaker 15 (46:36):
The training that the helicopter was involved in, is it anything you can tell us about that?
Trump (46:40):
You don't know. These are the things that will come up with the investigation. You don't know, but the helicopter obviously was in the wrong place at the wrong time and a tragedy occurred. Please.
crowd (46:52):
Mr. President.
Speaker 16 (46:52):
I've got a question about-
Trump (46:53):
No, go ahead, please.
Speaker 17 (46:54):
Thank you, Mr. President. You've been critical of the current regulations and you've called for big reforms at FAA. I'm curious, sir-
Trump (47:05):
Well, I made the reforms actually.
Speaker 17 (47:06):
What is your message-
Trump (47:07):
Three days ago I made the reforms.
Speaker 17 (47:08):
Yes, sir. What is your message then to the American public in the weeks and months ahead? Should they feel hesitant to fly? And if you could clarify perhaps something that the defense secretary said when he said that this helicopter went on a continuity of government mission?
Trump (47:23):
I don't know what that refers to, but they were practicing. They do that. They call it practicing and that's something that should be done. It's only continuity in the sense that we want to have very good people and that has to be in continuity and that's what they refer to, but it was basically practice and it was a practice that worked out very, very badly.
crowd (47:55):
Mr. President. Mr. President.
Speaker 18 (47:56):
On his question. The first question, should people be hesitant to fly right now?
Trump (47:59):
No, not at all. I've not hesitate to fly. This is something that it's been many years that something like this has happened and the collision is just something that we don't expect ever to happen again. We are going to have the highest level people, we've already hired some of the people that you've already hired for that position. Long before we knew about this, long before, from the time I came in, we started going out and getting the best people because I said it's not appropriate what they're doing. I think it's a tremendous mistake. They like to do things and they like to take them too far, and this is sometimes what ends up happening.
(48:38)
Now with that, I'm not blaming the controller. I'm saying there are things that you could question like the height of the helicopter and the height of the plane being at the same level and going in opposite directions. It's not a positive, but no, we are already hiring people. No, flying is very safe. We have the safest flying anywhere in the world and we'll keep it that way.
(48:58)
Thank you all very much. Thank you very much.
crowd (49:07):
Mr. President. Mr. President.