Texas museum forced to take down Trump statue because everyone keeps punching it

Louis Tussaud’s Waxworks in San Antonio has now moved the Trump statue to a storage room

Akshita Jain
Friday 19 March 2021 07:15 EDT
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Texas museum forced to take down Trump statue because everyone keeps punching it

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A wax museum in Texas has removed its statue of former US president Donald Trump from display after it was repeatedly punched by visitors. 

Louis Tussaud’s Waxworks in San Antonio, Texas, had to move the statue to a storage room because some museum visitors kept attacking it. 

They punched and scratched the figure, inflicting so much damage that it had to be pulled from public view, Clay Stewart, regional manager for Ripley Entertainment, which owns the museum, told San Antonio Express-News.

“When it’s a highly political figure, attacks can be a problem.”

Ahead of the US presidential election last year, Madame Tussauds in Berlin put its wax statue of Mr Trump in a dumpster. It was reportedly intended to reflect its expectations for the November polls. 

“We here at Madame Tussauds Berlin removed Donald Trump’s waxwork as a preparatory measure,” museum’s marketing manager Orkide Yalcindag said at the time. 

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Mr Trump left office with low approval ratings following the 6 January attack on the US Capitol. A Gallup survey, conducted between 4-15 January, showed that only 34 per cent of Americans approved of the job he was doing as president. His average approval rating during his term was 41.1 per cent, four points lower than for any of his predecessors since Gallup began gathering data.

Gallup also said that Mr Trump is the only president not to register a 50 per cent job approval rating at any point in his presidency since it began measuring presidential job approval in 1938.

Meanwhile, a Pew Research Center survey also said that Mr Trump left the White House with the lowest job approval of his presidency (29 per cent). Conducted between 8-12 January, the survey found that 68 per cent of Americans said Trump should not continue to be a major national political figure for many years to come. 

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