A harsh exchange of words
Earlier this week a lawmaker suggested that the US give back the Statue of Liberty to France, 140 years after the European country gifted it to America.
MEP Raphael Glucksmann previously said: âWeâre going to say to the Americans who have chosen to side with the tyrants, to the Americans who fired researchers for demanding scientific freedom: âGive us back the Statue of Libertyâ.
âWe gave it to you as a gift, but apparently you despise it. So it will be just fine here at home.â
Now, the White House has slammed the notion from Glucksmann.
The White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told a reporter who asked if Trump would give back the statue âabsolutely notâ.
She said: âMy advice to that unnamed, low-level French politician would be to remind them that itâs only because of the United States of America that the French are not speaking German right now, so they should be very grateful to our great country.â
Her comments have sparked a heated debate online with some pointing out that America wouldnât exist as a nation if it werenât for French weapons in the American Revolution.
The idea for the statue was originally conceived by French politician and US Constitution expert Edouard de Laboulaye as an emblem of the friendship between the French and the Americans.
It was then sculpted by Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi and took 20 years to build before it was dismantled and shipped to New York.
Glucksmann also suggested France would welcome the government researchers and employees who were fired en masse under the new administration.
He said: âIf you want to fire your best researchers, if you want to fire all the people who, through their freedom and their sense of innovation, their taste for doubt and research, have made your country the worldâs leading power, then weâre going to welcome them.â