The Denver Post

Charlotte won, but city isn’t putting out the welcome mat

- By Noah Bierman Chuck Burton, The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C.» As Americans fought in recent weeks over whether restaurant­s should refuse to serve top aides to President Donald Trump, an entire city has been debating what it means to host his convention for re-election.

Charlotte won the rights to the 2020 Republican National Convention on Friday. But that’s largely because it faced little serious competitio­n. And even before the victory was announced in Austin, Texas, this thriving, progressiv­e urban island in the Trump-friendly South was suffering some buyer’s remorse.

Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles, a Democrat, says the decision to host the convention has been the hardest she has tackled — “not just as a mayor but as a mom and as a friend” to her community.

To quell anger from her constituen­ts, she has vowed that she will not deliver a welcome speech, an extraordin­ary break from custom. Other local leaders are going further, promising to use the occasion to speak out against Trump.

“If it were Mitt Romney or damn near anybody besides Donald Trump,” the debate would have been “much less heated,” said Larken Egleston, a Democratic council member.

The Republican Party’s difficulty in finding a host for the 2020 convention speaks to the nation’s polarizati­on in the Trump era and to the diminishin­g support for Republican­s in

THE SCENT OF A STORM

cities that have the capacity to manage large-scale events. Even in Republican-dominated states, big cities have grown more culturally diverse and Democratic, with many residents seeing themselves as targets of Trump’s anti-immigratio­n measures, divisive racial rhetoric and social policy attacks.

Charlotte, a city where minorities are a majority is still nursing civic wounds from a police shooting of an African-American man that provoked violent protests two years ago and a fight with the state government over its limits on LGBTQ rights, a law that invited corporate boycotts. Now, this growing city of glass bank towers, brick warehouses and constructi­on cranes is bracing for another two years of culture wars and security fears — and the potential to be ground zero for anti-Trump protests in the summer of 2020.

Charlotte has long been eager to boost its national image, with civic leaders bemoaning that some outsiders still confuse it with Charleston, S.C., and Charlottes­ville, Va. Even as the city now has two profession­al sports teams and successful­ly served as host to the 2012 Democratic National Convention, boosters see the Republican convention as another trophy that would solidify its place on the map.

But as the selection process dragged on, it became increasing­ly clear that other major cities had taken a pass.

During a contentiou­s city council hearing earlier this week, member Matt Newton, an opponent, complained that Charlotte led the competitio­n “not because we stepped forward, but because everyone else stepped back.”

After Newton’s Democratic colleague Egleston cast what many perceived as the deciding vote to accept the convention, he faced an onslaught of angry emails and social media posts, along with threats of party primary challenger­s. Even so, Egleston said the city had to follow through after winning the competitio­n or risk harming its reputation. After all, council members told the mayor earlier this year that she should submit a bid.

By the time Republican officials made their choice, however, the only remaining competitio­n came from Nevada’s Republican Party, whose bid came without support from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority or the city government. Other potential sites flamed out earlier, including San Antonio, which voted in May against bidding after public concerns that associatio­n with Trump would tarnish the predominan­tly Latino city’s image.

Ron Kaufman, the chairman of the party’s site selection committee, pronounced himself thrilled with the choice of Charlotte. Yet he conceded the nation’s political divide had impacted the process.

“This is a very hard time in politics right now, across the board,” Kaufman said in an interview. “People are polarized.

“God help this country if there’s a point in time where either party couldn’t go to any city,” he added.

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