President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania paid their respects Monday to late president George HW Bush, whose remains lay in state in the US Capitol.
The Trumps made a short visit to the Capitol rotunda, where Bush’s coffin wrapped in a flag was resting as part of tributes to honor the 41st US president and commemorate his extraordinary life.
Bush died peacefully Friday at the age of 94, at his home in Houston, a passing that led Americans to reflect on his life of duty and service to country as a leader of the so-called “Greatest Generation.”
Only the second president to see his son follow him to the Oval Office, the Republican stalwart is being honoured with four days of commemorations and services in Washington and in Texas, where he will be buried Thursday.
Trump will attend the state funeral service on Wednesday at Washington National Cathedral the first presidential funeral since Gerald Ford died in 2006.
On Monday, after Bush relatives and dignitaries had gone, the president was driven from the White House up to Capitol Hill with the first lady at his side, Trump saluted, and they stood at Bush’s casket for about a minute. They exited the rotunda with little fanfare.
Bush had never warmed up to Trump, and he was open that he did not vote for him in 2016. Trump himself has criticised the elder Bush on the campaign trail.
However, on Monday Trump wrote members of Congress to hail Bush as a man who “led a life that exemplified what is truly great about America.”
“President Bush worked selflessly throughout his long life to bring about a world of justice and lasting peace,” he wrote.
Bush was a decorated World War II fighter pilot, one-time ambassador to China, former head of the Central Intelligence Agency, and vice president to Ronald Reagan before winning the White House.
Military pallbearers carried the flag-draped casket into the rotunda as a fiery sunset bathed Washington in a glow.
The ceremony was attended by his son George W Bush who was the nation’s 43rd president and other relatives, dignitaries and more than 100 members of the House and Senate.

Original article published on EWN