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On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Trump visits his golf course

(Andrew Harnik | The Associated Press) President Donald Trump, accompanied by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Calif., speaks to members of the media as they arrive for a dinner at Trump International Golf Club in in West Palm Beach, Fla., Sunday, Jan. 14, 2018. Trump spent the weekend, including Martin Luther King Jr. Day, at the golf course.

West Palm Beach, Fla. • President Donald Trump's first stop Monday was Trump International Golf Club, apparently beginning the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday with golf rather than the charitable service the slain civil rights leader's family has urged as the best way to memorialize him.

The morning after declaring "I'm not a racist," Trump began his Monday the same way he has begun each day of the three-day holiday weekend: with tweets sent before leaving his private Mar-a-Lago estate and then a short motorcade to the golf club.

Trump returned to Mar-a-Lago hours later and drove from there to the airport in late afternoon. He was not seen in public until he boarded Air Force One.

A White House spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the president's day, including whether he was playing golf.

Trump's weekly address, released Monday, honored King. About 11 a.m., roughly two hours after he arrived at the golf club, Trump retweeted the White House post containing the video.

"Dr. King's dream is our dream. It is the American Dream. It's the promise stitched into the fabric of our nation, etched into the hearts of our people and written into the soul of humankind," Trump said in the message.

The White House generally does not confirm whether Trump is playing golf while at the club.

Before eating dinner there Sunday evening, Trump took questions on the front portico and denied that he used the phrase "s---hole countries" to refer to Haiti and some African and Latin American countries. He also denied that the reported remark, made in the context of debate over U.S. immigration policy, showed him to be a racist.

"No, no, I'm not a racist," Trump told reporters. "I am the least racist person you have ever interviewed, that I can tell you."

Trump returned to Mar-a-Lago, a posh, historic coral-colored compound that is also a members-only club, shortly after 1:30 p.m. Along his route from Trump International, the motorcade sped past a crowd of demonstrators waving Haitian flags and signs.

One placard read: "Haiti is not a s---hole."

A smaller group of about a dozen Trump supporters gathered nearby. One sign read: "Honk for Trump."

Once there, Trump continued a public feud with Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., who has accused Trump of making the "s---hole" remark during a meeting with Durbin and other lawmakers last week.

"Senator Dicky Durbin totally misrepresented what was said," Trump tweeted.

Durbin was the only Democrat present at the White House meeting on immigration, including whether to extend new protection to hundreds of thousands of young people brought to the United States illegally as children. Trump has rescinded protection under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA.

Some Republicans have disputed that Trump made the remark as first reported by The Washington Post; others have declined to discuss the matter in detail. The White House did not initially deny that Trump used that language.

Before leaving the White House on Friday, Trump signed a proclamation for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and stood with a niece and nephew of King's to honor the activist's life.

"Through his bravery and sacrifice, Dr. King opened the eyes and lifted the conscience of our nation. He stirred the hearts of our people to recognize the dignity written in every human soul," Trump said then. "Today, we celebrate Dr. King for standing up for the self-evident truth Americans hold so dear, that no matter what the color of our skin or the place of our birth, we are all created equal by God."

Isaac Newton Farris, a nephew of King's, addressed Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, who also attended the ceremony.

"If my uncle were here today, the first thing he would say is, 'What are we or what are you doing for others?' " Farris said, adding that King's widow (and his aunt), Coretta Scott King, had asked Congress to call the holiday a day of service.

"We did not want the King holiday just to be a day of hero worship. As his nephew, I certainly think that he was one of the greatest Americans that we have produced. But it should not be a day of hero worship. And that's why the Congress agreed with my aunt and also made it a day of service," Farris said. "We refer to it as a day on, not a day off."

Sarah Huckabee Sanders tweeted about King on Monday, as well as about the battle over school desegregation in Little Rock, where she grew up. "Central High is now one of the most racially diverse schools in the state, and black unemployment in America just hit an all time low," Sanders wrote. "Far more to be done, but let's honor MLK's great legacy by empowering all Americans with better schools and better opportunity."

Sanders also retweeted a State Department message about how the day of service is honored at U.S. embassies and consulates worldwide.

Trump's re-election campaign issued a statement Monday from daughter-in-law Lara Trump in honor of the King holiday.

"Today we join all Americans in reflecting on the legacy and achievements of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He truly changed the course of human history, and his principles of nonviolence in pursuit of equality and justice continue to serve as an example for all the world," the statement said. "In so many ways, the hope and promise of Reverend King exists today, yet we are all called upon as Americans to continue his work and ensure that equal opportunity is available in every community and every corner of our society, including for our children and grandchildren."

Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., branded Trump a racist in an interview Sunday. The president's vulgar remark last week was only the latest example, Lewis and other Trump critics have said.

Trump was also widely criticized in the summer for equivocal remarks about white supremacists who demonstrated in Charlottesville, Va., against the potential removal of a Confederate statue. A woman who had come to demonstrate in opposition to the white supremacists was killed.

Trump later decried the removal of "beautiful" Confederate memorials to the Civil War.

"They're trying to take away our history," Trump said at a rally in Phoenix, Ariz., in August.

The president's criticism of kneeling NFL players also struck many critics as thinly veiled racism. Most of the players who took a knee rather than standing during the playing of the national anthem this season were black. The gesture was meant as a protest against inequality and police brutality.

Trump said it was an affront to patriotism and that players had many other ways to protest.

NFL owners should respond to the players by saying, "Get that son of a b---- off the field right now. Out. He's fired. He's fired!" Trump said in September.