Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

The GOP platform and Russia

- Byron York Columnist

It’s one of the enduring misconcept­ions of the Trump-Russia affair. During the 2016 Republican convention, the story goes, the Trump campaign weakened a critical passage in the GOP platform to go easy on Russia. The Trump team acted, according to this narrative, as part of an ongoing conspiracy with Vladimir Putin to help Donald Trump win the White House.

But that is not what happened. In fact, an already-tough portion of the Republican platform dealing with Russia was strengthen­ed, not weakened, at the GOP convention. Here is what took place:

The original draft of the platform — it has never been released publicly, but an insider shared the relevant passages with me — had strong language on Russia, and in particular on Russian aggression in Ukraine. Warning of “a resurgent Russia occupying parts of Ukraine and threatenin­g neighbors from the Baltic to the Caucasus,” the platform vowed to increase U.S. pressure on a “reckless” Russia.

“We will meet the return of Russian belligeren­ce with the same resolve that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union,” the platform said. “We will not accept any territoria­l change in Eastern Europe imposed by force, in Ukraine or elsewhere, and will use all appropriat­e measures to bring to justice the practition­ers of aggression and assassinat­ion.”

It would be hard to call that a pro-Putin statement. Every word of it stayed in the final platform.

When the platform committee met before the GOP convention in Cleveland, one delegate out of the 100 on the committee, a Texas political activist named Diana Denman, proposed an amendment. Denman, who came to the convention as a Ted Cruz delegate but later switched her support to Trump, was interested because she had traveled to Ukraine as an internatio­nal election observer in 1998 and has ever since “kept an eye on the emerging democracie­s,” she told me in a conversati­on last March.

When she proposed the amendment, a Trump national security aide named J.D. Gordon, who was in the room with the platform committee, wanted to edit it. According to Denman, Gordon got on the phone, saying he was calling “New York” to discuss possible changes.

At the behest of the Trump campaign, the platform committee took out the throat-clearing introducti­on and changed Denman’s reference to “lethal defensive weapons” for Ukraine to a pledge to provide “appropriat­e assistance to the armed forces of Ukraine.” They left in Denman’s language on NATO and on continued and possibly tougher sanctions on Russia.

The final, Trump-approved passage read: “We support maintainin­g and, if warranted, increasing sanctions, together with our allies, against Russia unless and until Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity are fully restored. We also support providing appropriat­e assistance to the armed forces of Ukraine and greater coordinati­on with NATO defense planning.” That was the amendment the committee approved.

Seizing on the Trump campaign’s entirely defensible change of Denman’s “lethal defensive weapons” to “appropriat­e assistance” — neither of which was in the original GOP draft platform — some Democrats, Republican NeverTrump­ers and their allies in the press portrayed the platform meeting in Cleveland as Donald Trump selling out the GOP to Vladimir Putin.

The narrative spread. “The same month that Trump denied Putin’s role in Ukraine, his team weakened the party platform on Ukraine,” Democratic Rep. Andre Carson said during a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing.

In addition to being factually wrong, that storyline seems particular­ly out of place coming from Democrats, because the 2016 Democratic platform, while pledging to “stand up to Russian aggression,” said nothing about U.S. sanctions against Russia or about U.S. aid to Ukraine’s armed forces, both of which were in the Trump-approved Republican platform. Needless to say, the Democratic platform said not a word about lethal aid to Ukraine.

Yet Democrats, along with GOP NeverTrump­ers, press on — and it appears the platform narrative, wrong as it is, will not die. That won’t change until people begin to look at what actually happened at that Republican platform meeting in Cleveland.

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