The Hamilton Spectator

Trump pledges better times for America if president

- JULIE PACE AND ROBERT FURLOW

Declaring America in crisis, Donald Trump pledged to cheering Republican­s and stillskept­ical voters that as president he will restore the safety they fear they’re losing, strictly curb immigratio­n and save the nation from a Hillary Clinton record of “death, destructio­n, terrorism and weakness.”

Confidentl­y addressing the finale of his party’s less-than-smooth national convention Thursday night, the billionair­e businessma­n declared the nation’s problems too staggering to be fixed within the confines of traditiona­l politics.

A political novice, he completed the greatest step yet in his improbable rise, accepting the GOP nomination to face Clinton, the former first lady, senator and secretary of state.

Trump’s address on the closing night of the Republican convention marked his highest-profile opportunit­y yet to show voters he’s prepared for the presidency.

As the crowd, fiercely opposed to Clinton, broke out in its oft-used chant of, “Lock her up,” he waved them off, and instead declared, “Let’s defeat her in November.”

He offered himself as a powerful ally of those who feel Washington has left them behind.

“I’m with you, and I will fight for you, and I will win for you,” he declared. “I have joined the political arena so that the powerful can no longer beat up on people that cannot defend themselves.”

He accused Clinton, his far-moreexperi­enced Democratic rival, of utterly lacking the good judgment to serve in the White House and as the military’s commander in chief.

“This is the legacy of Hillary Clinton: death, destructio­n and weakness,” he said. “But Hillary Clinton’s legacy does not have to be America’s legacy.”

In a direct appeal to Americans shaken by a summer of violence at home and around the world, Trump promised that if he takes office in January, “safety will be restored.”

He stuck to the controvers­ial proposals of his primary campaign, including building a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border.

He vowed to protect gays and lesbians from violence and oppression, and said he would ensure young people in predominan­tly black cities “have as much of a right to live out their dreams as any other child in America.”

He was introduced by his daughter Ivanka who announced a child care policy proposal that the campaign had not mentioned before.

“As president, my father will change the labour laws that were put in place at a time when women weren’t a significan­t portion of the workplace, and he will focus on making quality child care affordable and accessible for all,” she said.

Trump took the stage in Cleveland facing a daunting array of challenges, many of his own making. Though he vanquished 16 primary rivals, he’s viewed with unpreceden­ted negativity by the broader electorate, and is struggling in particular with younger voters and minorities, groups GOP leaders know they need for the party to grow.

The first three days of this week’s convention gathering bordered on chaos, starting with a plagiarism charge involving his wife Melania Trump’s speech and moving on to Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s dramatic refusal to endorse him from the convention stage.

Then, Trump sparked more questions about his Oval Office readiness by suggesting in the midst of the convention that the U.S. might not defend America’s NATO partners with him as president. The remarks, in an interview published online Wednesday by The New York Times, deviate from decades of American doctrine and seem to reject the 67-year-old alliance’s bedrock principle of collective defence. Trump did not repeat those comments from the convention stage. But he did disavow America’s foreign policy posture under both Democrat and Republican presidents, criticizin­g “fifteen years of wars in the Middle East” and declaring that “Americanis­m, not globalism, will be our credo.”

 ?? JEFF J MITCHELL, GETTY IMAGES ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump gestures to the crowd.
JEFF J MITCHELL, GETTY IMAGES Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump gestures to the crowd.

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