Melania Trump is set to take her biggest step yet as first lady. She’s leading the U.S. delegation to an international sporting event for wounded service members, her first solo trip outside of the U.S. to represent her adopted country without President Donald Trump at her side.
The daylong stop Saturday in Toronto also includes a brush with royalty.
The first lady is scheduled to meet for the first time with Britain’s Prince Harry, who founded the Invictus Games in 2014. She is also to meet with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and deliver remarks at a reception for the nearly 100 American athletes participating in the weeklong Olympic-style competition. Mrs. Trump will also attend Saturday’s opening ceremony.
Her decision to lead the U.S. delegation, whose members include Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin, professional golfer Nancy Lopez and entertainer Wayne Newton, reflects the first lady’s “utmost respect” for the hard work, courage and sacrifice of the U.S. military, said Stephanie Grisham, a spokeswoman for Mrs. Trump.
“She feels strongly that they, and their families, should be honored every day,” Grisham said.
Grisham added that Mrs. Trump also has “great admiration for the role the games have played in empowering those who have been injured while serving.”
At an event last week marking the 70th anniversary of the U.S. Air Force, the first lady thanked the many members of the military who assisted thousands people whose lives were upended by recent powerful hurricanes that ripped through parts of the southern U.S. and the Caribbean.
A native of Slovenia who became a U.S. citizen in 2006, Mrs. Trump also thanked service members’ families.
“You endure time apart, are expected to move when new orders come in, and face the uncertainty that can come in times of need,” she said at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, before introducing the president. “This kind of lifestyle requires its own kind of courage and your sacrifices do not go unnoticed or unappreciated.”
Mrs. Trump has been slowly warming up to her new role, waiting to move to the White House until her 11-year-old son finished the school year in New York and holding few public events of her own. She accompanied Trump on his three overseas trips so far this year, but Saturday will mark the first time that she crosses the border without him.
Mrs. Trump’s participation continues White House involvement with the games, which were launched during President Barack Obama’s tenure.
Jill Biden, wife of then-Vice President Joe Biden, led the U.S. delegation to London as part of a military initiative undertaken with then-first lady Michelle Obama. Mrs. Obama helped open last year’s competition in Orlando.