President Trump swings by Ryder Cup amid protests, counterprotests and a shaky USA team start

This story was reported and written by Laura Figueroa Hernandez, Ted Phillips and Nicholas Spangler.
President Donald Trump stepped out before packed stands at the Ryder Cup at Bethpage Black Friday to a mix of cheers and boos, briefly taking center stage at one of the biggest golf competitions in the world.
The appearance by the president — an ardent golfer who owns several courses and has attended close to 10 major sporting events since returning to the White House in January — occasioned dueling demonstrations on Farmingdale streets, a massive security mobilization from local and national law enforcement and criticism from Democrats in Congress.
Area streets were snarled well into the afternoon, though that appeared to have more to do with tournament traffic than the president's visit.
Trump's Truth Social media feed showed a morning shift in focus from his approval rating and the purported risks of Tylenol for pregnant women to golf: "Flying over Ryder Cup, now! DJT" he posted, at 10:59 a.m.
WHAT NEWSDAY FOUND
- President Donald Trump appeared at the Ryder Cup golf competition at the Bethpage Black golf course Friday on the first of three days of international match play.
- Trump swung by the 18th green and spoke briefly with the European and U.S. team captains.
- About 100 anti-Trump protesters and a dozen Trump supporters demonstrated outside the golf course.
He landed at Republic Airport in East Farmingdale just before 11:15 a.m., traveling with his granddaughter Kai Trump, herself an avid golfer.
Stopping to talk briefly to pool reporters at the airport, Trump was asked if he was looking forward to attending the Ryder Cup and whether he would give a pep talk to Team USA, who trailed in match play most of the day. He quipped that he was there to be "Knute Rockne," invoking the legendary Notre Dame football coach whose speech famously inspired a comeback win.
"I heard the team is not doing so well. So when I heard that, I said, let's get on the plane. We have to fly and help them. We have three matches and tied in one. So that's, so we'll get it, we'll get it done one way or the, we'll get it done," Trump said.
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The stands were jam-packed and the mood was raucous, with thunderous "USA" chants greeting every American success on the course. Thousands more fans were behind the ropes out on the course.
Trump appeared shortly before noon, his presence signaled by an announcement over loudspeakers and thousands of fans' cellphones taken out to record the moment. Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman joined him in a glass-protected viewing area at the bottom of the stands. Trump could be seen on a giant video screen saluting during the national anthem, wearing golf shoes a blue jacket and no tie. Four military jets soon flew over in tight diamond formation.
USA team captain Keegan Bradley appeared to acknowledge the president as he walked to the tee, giving a fighter’s one-two punch and bowing as he passed the glass viewing area.
Trump left the area around 12:30 p.m., giving the crowd a double fist pump and drawing USA chants.
The crowd's reaction to the arrival and departure of the leader of the free world was muted, far quieter than when the final foursome of morning play approached the hole.
Later, in a statement sent by a spokesman, Blakeman, who greeted Trump at Republic, rode with him in the Beast, the armored presidential limo, and sat with him at the tournament, said: "It was an honor to have President Trump in Nassau County for the Ryder Cup. The crowd loved him and he thoroughly enjoyed his time here. We had an extensive conversation about important issues concerning the nation and the region."
Presidential sports fan
The visit capped a roughly eight-month stretch in which the president -- a WWE Hall of Fame member, would-be Mets owner and actual owner of a bygone professional football franchise, the New Jersey Generals -- has attended a slew of sports events.
They include the Super Bowl in New Orleans, the Daytona 500, UFC fights in Miami and Newark, New Jersey, the NCAA wrestling championships in Philadelphia, the FIFA Club World Cup final in East Rutherford, New Jersey, and the U.S. Open men’s final. The White House did not respond to a question about whether that busy schedule was part of a communications strategy or merely a sign that the man enjoys watching sports.
It could be both. “He’s much more present, verbal and opinionated when it comes to sport than any president before him,” said David Andrews, a University of Maryland professor and author of “Making Sport Great Again.” ”Being at a major sporting event does bring with it heightened visibility, and it allows people to clip you on social media.”
There was less fuss at Bethpage Friday than the president's visit caused several weeks ago at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center for the men's final of the U.S. Open tennis tournament, which delayed the start of the match and snarled entry for some fans with stadium tickets.
Fans moved quickly through magnetometers set up near the course entrance, though the grounds near Trump's viewing area was heavily patrolled by law enforcement officers from Nassau County, New York State police and Secret Service.
Some fans complained of delays but much of the slowdown occurred hours before the president's visit on area roads, not on the course itself. Heavy traffic turned what had been a 10-minute shuttle ride into an hour-long voyage.
"Get ready for the longest shortest trip of your life," the driver of one shuttle bus told riders, truthfully.
Delays getting to Bethpage
Inside Bethpage, just past the security checkpoint at around 10:30 a.m., Massapequa Park resident Mike Mazol, retired from the airline catering industry, and Bob Van Nostrand, of West Islip, retired from the biotech industry, enjoyed morning cigars.
Mazol said it took him and his friends more than an hour to reach Bethpage on a shuttle bus that left from Farmingdale State College. If some of the delay was caused by Trump’s scheduled arrival, he said he didn’t mind: "I’d love to see him. I voted for him. ... I think he likes sports."
Van Nostrand said, "It shouldn’t take an hour to go 2 miles..." We still haven’t seen anybody hit a ball.I feel for the people who paid a lot of money to come here from overseas."
Those overseas visitors included Ruth and Lawrence Hughes, from the United Kingdom. Lawrence, a retired engineer, said they’d left their Manhattan hotel at 6:45 a.m. to get a 7:16 a.m. LIRR train to get to the course near tee time but sat in Long Island traffic for an hour. He chalked that delay up to the presidential visit.
But the couple said they’d adopted a Zen-like approach to delays: "We get in when we get in. Otherwise, you go crackers," Lawrence said.
Shortly after noon, about 90 demonstrators gathered on the northwestern corner of Merritts Road and Conklin Steet in front of the Marquis Plaza shopping center, waved American flags and showed handmade signs calling for resistance to Trump. Trucks and cars honked in a cacophony as they passed. Demonstrators chanted pro-immigration slogans and "No Trump, No KKK, No fascist USA."
Across the street a dozen Trump supporters waved American flags as well as Trump flags.
"I felt like I needed to lend my voice to the overall voice of dissent," Allan Hunter, 66, a software developer from New Hyde Park said as he held a sign that said "We Don't Do Kings in America."
Hunter said he was doubtful that the U.S. would be restored after Trump leaves office. "He's so thoroughly eroded established rights, liberties and civil protections," Hunter said. "He's shown that totalitarianism can work here."
Joana Enea, 66, a retired student housing worker from South Hempstead, said she was protesting because "I am afraid for this country."
Enea said she was disturbed by seeing "illegal immigrants getting rounded up without due process and getting deported without due process."
"That's not democracy, that's not this country," Enea said. She said it was important to stand against "fascism."
Across the street, Trump supporters blasted music from speakers atop a white jeep.
"I'm here to support Donald Trump," said Charlie Hart, 33, a mobile dog groomer from Farmingdale. "We're here to stand for freedom."
Stephanie Liu, 60, a community health care representative originally from China, came from Astoria to support Trump.
"I'm a MAGA supporter," Liu said. She said she likes Trump because "he fights for our country, for our freedom."
An immigrant herself, Liu said Trump "isn't against immigration, he's against illegal immigration."
Far from the golf and the spectacle, Democrats in Congress criticized Trump for leaving Washington ahead of a possible government shutdown. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-Brooklyn) told reporters at the Capitol: “Donald Trump, as we speak, is at a golf tournament!...Get back to Washington D.C.! Why are you at a golf event right now -- and the government is four days aways from closing?” Jeffries said.
White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told Newsday that the blame fell not on Trump but on Congressional Democrats, whom she said were holding the American people "hostage" by not voting for the Trump-backed short term spending plan.
Newsday's Carl MacGowan, Howard Schnapp, Billy House and the AP contributed to this story.
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