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Trump visits Florida hospital to honor victims of Parkland shooting

President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump, aiming to honor the victims of Wednesday’s school shooting in Parkland, Florida, visited Broward Health North Hospital on Friday, the hospital where many of the victims were treated.

A White House statement said that the Trumps were visiting “to pay their respects and thank the medical professionals for their life-saving assistance” in response to shooting.

The Wednesday shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School killed 17 people. Many of those injured were taken to Broward Health North Hospital, including the shooter in the attack.

The visit thrusts Trump into a role where he has previously struggled to strike the right tone: consoler in chief. The trip also could put the President face-to-face with people impacted by the shooting who have called on him to do something to curb that prevalence of guns in the United States.

Trump’s visit to Florida was not a last-minute add to his schedule; he’d been planning to spend the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago estate, some 40 miles from Parkland, as well as tout his infrastructure plan at a concrete plant near Orlando. The infrastructure event was canceled after the shooting.

Aides originally intended for Trump to visit the shooting victims on Saturday, but it was determined that arriving at his lavish beachside home before paying respects to the victims might appear in poor taste.

Before departing for Florida, Trump wrote on Twitter that he was meeting “some of the bravest people on earth – but people whose lives have been totally shattered.” He also wrote he was “working with Congress on many fronts” but did not provide details, nor even specify if he was referring to gun control.

Trump did not address the shooting on Wednesday night, choosing instead to wait until Thursday morning to speak to the nation from the White House. There were conversations among Trump’s aides about an earlier statement, but ultimately the White House determined it would be wiser to wait until more details were known about the situation.

When he did emerge in the Diplomatic Room, Trump delivered a somber statement that did not directly address the issue of firearms. Instead he spoke to children, who he said may be feeling “scared.”

“I want you to know that you are never alone and you never will be,” Trump said. “You have people who care about you, who love you and who will do anything at all to protect you.”

In stopping near the scene of the massacre, Trump is following a well-worn pattern of presidents jetting to communities reeling from tragedy and attempting words of solace. But even some of Trump’s closest advisers have admitted privately that consoling does not come naturally to the brash and sometimes impolitic President.

When he phoned the widow of a slain US serviceman in October, his attempted words of comfort fell flat when he told the mourning wife her husband “knew what he signed up for.” And in the aftermath of hurricanes last year, Trump was criticized for overly valedictory remarks, even as thousands remained without power or food.

In both instances, criticism from those affected by the tragedies led to an indignant, outsized response from Trump, who is sensitive to accusations that he’s not temperamentally suited for the office. The ensuing battles between Trump and people still healing from tragedy lasted days, if not weeks.

That scenario appeared ripe for repetition this week in Florida, where some students who attended Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School have loudly protested what they say is lack of action on the part of Trump and lawmakers to prevent gun deaths. Trump has not signed any gun control measures as President. A year ago this week he signed a measure that revoked an Obama-era rule that would prevent some mentally ill people from purchasing firearms.

“It’s scary to think that these are the people who are making our laws when our community just took 17 bullets to the heart, and it just seems like the only people who don’t care are the people making the laws,” Cameron Kasky, a 17-year-old junior, said on Friday. He and his brother Holden survived Wednesday’s school shooting.

“When politicians say now is not the time, I want to ask them: When is? How many more children need to die?” asked David Hogg, who is also 17 and a senior, as he looked directly into a CNN camera.

Even the President’s beloved New York Post, a conservative Rupert Murdoch tabloid, trumpeted a front-page plea: “Mr. President Please Act. We need sensible gun control to help stop the slaughter.”

Perhaps the most outspoken has been Lori Alhadeff, whose 14-year-old daughter, Alyssa, was shot and killed on Wednesday.

“President Trump, Barron goes to school. Let’s protect Barron,” she said on CNN, referring to Trump’s own 11-year-old son. “And let’s also protect all these other kids here in Parkland, in Florida and everywhere else in the United States of America.”

“You need to help us now!” she went on, her voice crescendoing. “We need security now for all these children that have to go to school. We need action. Action! Action!”

Alhadeff held her daughter’s funeral on Friday.

By Kevin Liptak, Dan Merica and Allie Malloy, CNN