Swalwell is confronted with social media recovery for posting Trump to Georgia Small Airplane Creator


Rep. Eric Swallwell, D-Calif., Is confronted online with a recoil after he suggests that President Donald Trump is the fault of a small plane crash in Georgia this weekend.

Swallwell Nam On Monday morning to social media to declare that Trump in his first month in office “had more planes” than any other US president. The legislator made the comment in response to a small private airplane algae that took place this weekend in Covington, Georgia, so two let people dead.

Social media users immediately started to stack and called Swallwell for what they saw as an unfair bond with Trump.

“Do you feel that the catalysts for those crashes were all caused by the policy changed in the past month?” A user wrote.

Moving video of the military base shows a new perspective of crash catastrophe in the air

“You really have TDS. Grab some coffee and take a walk,” wrote another user, name Southern Republicanmomma.

Swallwell’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from FOX News Digital.

FAA, NTSB to the briefing of senators on Washington, DC, Midair Collision

The crash of Georgia saw a single-engine aircraft take off from the municipal airport of Covington on Saturday at 11 p.m. Land control lost communication with the aircraft about 20 minutes later, at which point police officers crashed at the runway at the runway.

Sean Duffy

Transport secretary Sean Duffy has tackled the public several times with regard to recent aircraft accidents in Washington, DC, Philadelphia and elsewhere. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The two occupants of the plane were immediately announced on the spot.

“On February 15, 2025, the officers of Covington Police Department responded at about 11:21 pm at the municipal airport of Covington after a phone call from the FAA in reference to an airplane with one engine that had left there at about 11 p.m. Communication from the plane after taking off, “said Covington’s police in a statement.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has confirmed that they are investigating the crash.

DC -airplane crash site

Wreckage can be seen in the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, on Thursday, January 30. (Petty Officer 1st Class Brandon Giles, US Coast Guard via AP)

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The incident comes after the superior Another plane crashes In recent weeks, the most dramatic clash of a helicopter and a commercial aircraft in the air above Washington, DC last month.