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President Donald Trump calls out NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace

Monday morning, President Donald Trump posted a series of tweets, one of which was aimed at NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace.

Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Victory Junction

Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Victory Junction

John Harrelson / NKP / Motorsport Images

Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro
Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro
Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro and a Nascar official
President Donald J. Trump and First Lady Melania Trump walk to their car after then command at the Daytona 500
Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Victory Junction and Richard Petty
Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Victory Junction
Fans cheer for Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro
Darrell Wallace Jr., Richard Petty Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Victory Junction and Richard Petty
Air Force One arrives at Daytona with President Donald Trump.
Donald J Trump, The President of The United States and Grand Marshall for the Daytona 500 meets with Rick and Linda Hendrick and Coach Joe Gibbs and Roger and Cathy Penske
President Donald J. Trump, limo, beast, perfect, stable, genius, pace laps
President Donald Trump at Daytona 500

Wallace has taken a stand in recent weeks as the Cup Series' only African-American driver, calling for the Confederate flag ban and running a Black Lives Matter paint scheme at Martinsville Speedway.

At Talladega Superspeedway, NASCAR took immediate action after a crew member reported finding a noose in Bubba Wallace's garage stall Sunday. This had followed protests outside the track regarding the sport's decision to ban the Confederate flag. Wallace was told of the incident later by NASCAR President Steve Phelps and never saw the noose himself. 

Before the race, which was postponed to Monday due to inclement weather, every driver and most crew members pushed Wallace's Richard Petty Motorsports No. 43 car to the end of pit lane and stood with him in solidarity. 

The FBI was brought in, which later determined the object in question to be a garage door pull down rope fashioned in the shape of a noose, and that it had been there since October, 2019. NASCAR says no other garage door pull down rope was fashioned in this way, and they checked all 1,648 garages at each of the 20 tracks on the circuit.

The noose found in the No. 43 garage

The noose found in the No. 43 garage

Photo by: NASCAR Media

“As I mentioned on Tuesday, given the facts presented to us, we would have pursued this with the same sense of urgency and purpose,” Phelps said following the investigation. “Upon learning of and seeing the noose, our initial reaction was to protect our driver."

Despite this, over two weeks later, United States President Donald Trump felt compelled to tweet at Wallace, tagging him and suggesting the driver should apologize. He referred to the incident as "another hoax" and made the baseless claim that NASCAR's TV ratings are the lowest they've ever been following the sport's decision to ban the Confederate flag.

This is unequivocally false as Nielsen reports an 8% increase in FOX Sport's number since returning from its pandemic hiatus on May 17. Ratings at Martinsville -- the first race following the flag ban -- were up 104% from the comparable race one year prior.

 

Richard Childress Racing driver and two-time NASCAR Xfinity Series champion Tyler Reddick was the first Cup Series driver to speak out: "We don’t need an apology. We did what was right and we will do just fine without your support."

However, the tweet has since been to deleted for unknown reasons.

Other drivers from both NASCAR and IndyCar including Jimmie Johnson, Myatt Snider, Brandon Brown, Matt Tifft, Robby Lyons, Austin Theriault, Stefan Wilson, Jack Harvey, JR Hildebrand and Zach Veach have since voiced their support for Wallace or condemned the President's comments.

NASCAR and Bubba Wallace respond

NASCAR released the following statement, reaffirming their position to stand with Wallace, but opting not to mention President Trump directly. “We are proud to have Bubba Wallace in the NASCAR family and we commend his courage and leadership. NASCAR continues to stand tall with Bubba, our competitors and everyone who makes our sport welcoming and inclusive for all racing fans.”

Additionally, NASCAR says that viewership for Sunday's Brickyard 400 was up 46% over last year's race, which was held on Labor Day Weekend rather than the Fourth of July.

Wallace released his own statement Monday afternoon in response to President Trump's tweet, saying, "Love over hate every day. Love should come naturally as people are taught to hate ... Even when it's hate from the POTUS ... Love wins." Full statement below:

 

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