Friday, December 5, 2025
ADVT 
International

Protesters heckle Trump at Washington restaurant

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Sep, 2025 12:01 PM
  • Protesters heckle Trump at Washington restaurant

US President Donald Trump was heckled by a group of protesters on Tuesday evening at a prominent restaurant in Washington, DC. 

In a video aired by CNN, the agitators shouted, “Free DC! Free Palestine! Trump is the Hitler of our time!” as Trump approached them without offering a response.

He then gestured to his security staff to get the area cleared, saying, “Come on, let’s go.”

Accompanied by Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, Trump headed to Joe’s Seafood, a popular eatery just blocks from the White House.

It was the first time Trump stepped out of the White House for a meal in his second term. In his last tenure, he only dined in his own hotel in the capital.

An activist group, Code Pink, took responsibility for the heckling and posted on X, “While Trump, JD Vance, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth and others feasted at a steakhouse, we stood our ground and told them the truth: Free DC. Free Palestine. Trump is the Hitler of our time.”

The post added, “Trump looked us in the eyes, we made sure he will never dine in peace while communities are under siege.”

The restaurant visit was aimed at promoting Trump’s assertion that the US capital has become safer since the deployment of federal troops last month.

Before the protest, Trump addressed the media outside the venue, saying, “We have a capital that’s very, very safe right now.”

“The restaurants now are booming. People are going out to dinner where they didn’t go out for years, and it’s a safe city,” he told the media just outside the restaurant,” he added.

Laura Loomer, a prominent conservative voice, lashed out at the protest, pointing to security threats.

“Where the hell is @SecretService. How did they get within inches of him? This is insane. How did this happen!?” she posted on X.

Picture Courtesy: IANS 

MORE International ARTICLES

Britain doubles residency requirement for permanent settlement to 10 years

Britain doubles residency requirement for permanent settlement to 10 years
When asked by local media whether he had "shot himself in the foot" by requiring migrants to live in the country twice as long before becoming eligible for citizenship, Starmer responded: "The theory that higher migration numbers lead to growth has been tested in the last four years."

Britain doubles residency requirement for permanent settlement to 10 years

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV
Pope Leo XIV, now the successor of St. Peter, leads the 1.4 billion-strong Catholic Church in a sacred role that few others will ever hold.

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill
Canadian snowbirds could stay longer in the United States without a visa if a bill recently proposed in the U.S. House of Representatives becomes law.

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere
Travel to the United States took another hit in April with booking agents saying an "elbows up" attitude over the trade war has Canadians pulling back. 

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war
NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump's tariffs crusade has taken aim at a number of foreign goods, from European wines and car parts from Mexico to films made abroad. Lately, the president's wandering ire has found another rhetorical poster child: toy dolls.

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999
A British Columbia researcher in South Asian affairs said Thursday that concerns about the current India and Pakistan tensions are justified, given that the region has not seen conflicts this intense in more than 25 years. 

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999