Martin Luther King's son calls meeting with Trump constructive

Los Angeles Times
January 16, 2017 at 9:25PM
Martin Luther King III will meet with President-elect Donald Trump on Monday in New York to discuss voting rights and ways to pursue King’s legacy.
Martin Luther King III will meet with President-elect Donald Trump on Monday in New York to discuss voting rights and ways to pursue King’s legacy. (Associated Press/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

WASHINGTON – President-elect Donald Trump met with Martin Luther King III on Monday, a holiday commemorating the life of King's father, which this year was marked by Trump's quarrel with Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., a hero of the civil rights struggle.

King, the oldest surviving child of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., described the meeting at Trump Tower as constructive and said it had centered on efforts to improve the voting system.

Asked by reporters about Trump's characterization Saturday of Lewis as "all talk. no action," King said he "absolutely" disagreed.

"I would say John Lewis has demonstrated that he is action," said King.

But, he added, "Things get said on both sides in the heat of emotion. And at some point in this nation, we've got to move forward."

The conflict between the president-elect and Lewis began Friday when NBC's "Meet the Press" released video of Lewis saying he did not consider Trump a legitimate president.

On Saturday, Trump responded via Twitter, criticizing Lewis and referring to his Atlanta-area congressional district as downtrodden and crime-ridden. Actually, it includes many of the city's high-end areas.

King said Trump told him that he intended to represent all Americans.

"I believe that's his intent," King said. "I believe we have to consistently engage with pressure, public pressure."

In his reference to voting, King appeared to be referring to difficulties faced by black voters, many of them due to restrictive laws put into effect by Republican legislators.

Trump, during his campaign, suggested that voters in overwhelmingly black cities such as Philadelphia could be planning to steal the election via voter fraud.

After the meeting, Trump accompanied King down the elevator and shook his hand before returning upstairs. He did not speak to reporters.

President-Elect Donald J. Trump, left, shakes hands with Martin Luther King III as they exit the elevators in the lobby of the Trump Tower Monday, Jan. 16, 2017 in New York. (Anthony Behar/Sipa USA/TNS)
President-Elect Donald Trump met Monday with Martin Luther King III at Trump Tower in New York. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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