Los Angeles Times

Five takeaways from the second night

- By Mark Z. Barabak

Live, from the White House Rose Garden! Coming to you from a rooftop in Jerusalem! It’s the Republican National Convention!

Neither is your typical presidenti­al campaign backdrop.

However, for an incumbent who doesn’t just break customs but grinds them to fine powder, it should hardly be surprising this unconventi­onal convention would stray far from tradition and the usual political norms.

President Trump, the nation’s impresario-in-chief, promised the unexpected. Perhaps the biggest surprise, though, is how ordinary this convention — hit-and-miss speeches, slick videos, lots of flags and martial music — has seemed, save for those two controvers­ial settings.

Here are five takeaways from the second night of the GOP convention.

Melania Trump’s moment

When First Lady Melania Trump stepped to a lectern bearing the presidenti­al seal, she was assuming a traditiona­l role as political helpmate and character witness for her spouse.

“In my husband, you have a president who will not stop fighting for you and your families,” she said. “I see how hard he works each day and night. And despite the unpreceden­ted attacks from the media and opposition, he will not give up.”

It was a rare political speech by the first lady, who sounded notes seldom heard during the convention.

She offered sympathy to those who’ve lost a loved one to the COVID-19 pandemic. “My prayers are with those who are ill or suffering,” she said. “I want you to know you are not alone.”

She also showed more empathy than her husband — and most speakers — for those demonstrat­ing against the country’s pervasive and stubborn racism.

“It is a harsh reality that we are not proud of parts of our history,” she said. “I encourage people to focus on our future while still learning from our past. We must remember that today we are all one community comprised of many races, religions and ethnicitie­s.”

What made the moment stand out was less her words than the appearance at the White House and its brazen use as a campaign prop. (Trump, who looked on from a small, mask-less Rose Garden audience, intends to deliver his acceptance speech Thursday night before invited guests on the South Lawn.)

Four years ago, Melania Trump was found to have plagiarize­d her convention speech from one Michelle Obama delivered in 2008. This time, an advisor said, the first lady wrote every word of her nearly half-hour address.

Secretary of State speaks

While a speech by the first lady has become a fairly standard part of the official program, an appearance by the secretary of State is not. (Foreign policy supposedly transcendi­ng politics, which supposedly halts at the water’s edge.)

That, however, did not stop Michael R. Pompeo from weighing in during an official State Department visit to Israel and delivering a partisan address.

In an appearance recorded before a night sky in Jerusalem, he echoed Trump’s attacks blaming China for the spread of the coronaviru­s, which has killed nearly 180,000 Americans, tanked the economy and gravely imperiled the president’s reelection. He offered a highly subjective tour d’horizon, praising the president’s overtures to North Korea and efforts — so far unavailing — to bring peace to the Middle East.

“Delivering on thisduty to keep us safe and our freedoms intact, this president has led bold initiative­s in nearly every corner of the world,” Pompeo said.

It was hardly the most startling or scintillat­ing four minutes of programmin­g. But it prompted a House investigat­ion into whether Pompeo violated federal ethics laws, the latest in a long line of congressio­nal inquiries that, in the last four years, have become a cottage industry.

Trump Incorporat­ed

Another night, more branches of the Trump family tree.

Two of the president’s less-visible offspring, Eric and Tiffany, took turns at the lectern before the first lady spoke, assailing Democrat Joe Biden and restating some familiar grievances.

Eric Trump called the former vice president “a career politician” and “total pushover for China” who’ll raise taxes, take away guns, undermine police and “give amnesty and healthcare to all illegal immigrants.”

Tiffany Trump assailed the media. “Rather than allowing Americans the right to form their own beliefs,” she said, “this misinforma­tion system keeps people mentally enslaved to the ideas they deem correct.”

Typically, most family members are treated at political convention­s in Victorian fashion — seen, but not heard. They help form a fine tableau at the end, standing silently onstage when the balloons shower down.

But the Trump presidency has been a family enterprise like no other in modern times, with his daughter and son-in-law serving as senior White House advisors. (Both are slated to speak later this week, along with Eric’s wife, Lara. Donald Jr., and his girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle, appeared Monday night.)

As a businessma­n, Trump affixed his name to just about everything imaginable: steaks, neckties, wine, bottled water and condominiu­ms. It’s no surprise his convention would serve as another branding opportunit­y with the Trump name front and center.

The only thing missing was a commercial logo and 800 number.

The message: Trump cares

By tradition, the party in the White House holds its convention second.

In effect, that gives Republican­s an advantage as they have the chance to respond to Biden and the Democratic carpet-bombing of the president.

Much of the week’s counterpro­gramming can be summed up thusly: Reelect Trump or America will become an ashen pit that makes the seventh circle of hell seem like a day at the beach.

But there’s another point Republican­s sought to make in direct rejoinder.

Much of the Democratic convention was spent depicting Biden as a caring and empathetic contrast to his purportedl­y unfeeling rival. The GOP responded with heart-tugging tales of its own: Trump consoling the family of a boy killed in a car crash. Trump visiting a hospitaliz­ed Republican congressma­n who was shot and nearly killed while playing softball. Trump, a private businessma­n, helping fund a charity medical mission to Guatemala.

Watch what he does ...

Let’s face it. Donald Trump has all the subtlety of a hammer to the kneecap.

For some, that’s a big part of his appeal. His piledrivin­g persona makes the president the antithesis of the stereotypi­cal go-alongto-get-along, say-whatplease­s-people politician.

There are also a great many put off by Trump’s belligeren­t behavior.

And then there are those in between, who may cringe at the way he talks and Tweets but like a lot of what Trump has accomplish­ed, such as cutting taxes and stocking the federal bench with conservati­ve judges.

To those who may be wavering, the convention has offered one of the more finely tuned messages, essentiall­y saying, yeah, Trump may be crude and off-putting at times, but it’s still OK to vote for him in November.

Of course, given the president’s tissue-thin skin, no one wants to come out and actually call him crude or offputting, so they resort to other ways of describing him. He’s tough. He’s intense. He may not be the world’s best diplomat, but he gets things done.

“Whether you like it not, you always know what he’s thinking,” Melania Trump told her Rose Garden audience and millions of Americans listening across the country.

It may be subtle, but Republican­s hope the message gets through.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? MELANIA TRUMP struck notes rarely heard at the convention, extending sympathy to those affected by COVID-19 and acknowledg­ing racial justice protesters.
Evan Vucci Associated Press MELANIA TRUMP struck notes rarely heard at the convention, extending sympathy to those affected by COVID-19 and acknowledg­ing racial justice protesters.

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