UPDATE (April 28, 2025, 1:40 p.m. ET): A White House official told NBC News that Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts will not be visiting the White House with his team on Monday afternoon, blaming “scheduling conflicts.”
The most political thing we’ve ever heard from Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts are the compliments he gave former President Barack Obama after he and the former president golfed with Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie in October. Hurts didn’t celebrate Obamacare or the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reforms Obama signed. He just uttered some platitudes, calling Obama an “uncle figure,” an “all-time leader” and “a great presence.”
After being disinvited in 2018 by Trump, the Eagles are scheduled to visit the White House on Monday.
With praise so generic, Hurts could have been speaking about any president, and that’s probably how he wanted it. Finding that equilibrium won’t be so easy Monday, when the Eagles’ players will be scrutinized for evidence of where they stand on President Donald Trump. Seven years after a previous Eagles team won the Super Bowl and was invited to the White House and then disinvited by Trump, the Eagles are scheduled to visit the White House on Monday, a tradition for Super Bowl winners since Jimmy Carter invited the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1980. Surely, not every Steeler of that era voted for Carter, and sports reporters of the day weren’t in the habit (or maybe didn’t have the courage) to ask “Mean” Joe Greene or Jack Lambert, the snaggletoothed and fearsome linebacker, if they were registered Democratic or Republican.
These are different times, when many fans want their favorite players to reflect their political views or may even pick their favorites based on their perceived political views. Such expectations will leave Eagles players in a no-win situation Monday. If they show up, it’ll be for a photo-op with a president deeply unpopular in Philly, where Trump lost by wide margins in all three of his presidential bids. If a star like Hurts skips, Trump gets to unleash one of his angry social media rants.
Just watch how Hurts responded last week when he was asked Thursday if he would be attending the White House with the team. I used a link here rather than quote Hurts because there’s nothing to quote. Rather than speak, he looks at the interviewer for a few seconds. Thus, his answer was complete silence. But a silence that nonetheless spoke volumes.
Hurts knows people would read something into his answer no matter what his answer was, and that’s a paradigm of the president’s making. Trump knows how to benefit politically from people who stand with him and people who don’t and deftly uses athletes as political fodder, especially about racially divisive issues that appeal to his conservative base.
His earlier battles with the NBA and the NFL might have been the first iteration of that strategy. At the zenith of NFL players’ anti-police-violence protests in 2017, Trump said at a campaign rally for then-Sen. Luther Strange of Alabama that, when a player protested, NFL owners should “get that son of a bitch off the field right now.” In other words, fire any player who knelt during the national anthem. Later that year, he disinvited the NBA champion Golden State Warriors from visiting the White House. Warriors star Stephen Curry and head coach Steve Kerr had publicly criticized Trump.
In 2018, Trump turned his ire to the Eagles, that year’s Super Bowl champs. ESPN reported that as few as five Eagles players planned to attend the Eagles’ planned visit to the White House that year before Trump canceled it altogether. Leaked audio from an October 2017 meeting of NFL players and execs revealed that Lurie had called Trump’s presidency “a disaster,” The New York Times reported. Lurie has said he looks forward to this year’s visit, but player attendance is optional.








