The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Voter errors can lead to rejected ballots

- Marc Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

The U.S. Postal Service and state voting procedures are under scrutiny as the nation approaches the Nov. 3president­ial election.

The Republican National Convention was a resounding success because it achieved what its organizers set out to do: create a permission structure that allows millions of reluctant voters to cast their ballots for President Donald Trump.

A recent poll shows that more Americans approve of Trump’s economic policies than of Trump overall. These voters, of all colors, believe the president when he said Thursday night that before the pandemic he “built the strongest economy in the history of the world” and that given a second term he will “again build the greatest economy in history, quickly returning to full employment, soaring incomes and record prosperity.” They know it is in their economic self-interest to pull the lever for Trump.

But one of the reasons they are reluctant to do so is because virtually every day for the past four years they have been told by Democrats that Trump is a racist. So, Republican­s set out this week to tell the untold story of Trump’s real record when it comes to the African American community.

Every night of the convention featured African American speakers who attested to Trump’s achievemen­ts for the Black community. Voters saw the president’s commitment to redemption and second chances, as he delivered a full presidenti­al pardon for Jon Ponder, a Black man convicted of bank robbery who turned his life around and started an organizati­on, Hope for Prisoners, that helps ex-convicts reenter society. Ponder described how Trump spoke at the organizati­on’s graduation ceremony and “went out of his way to shake the hand of every one of those 29 graduates.”

Americans heard from Alice Johnson, a Black woman who had her life sentence for a first-time, nonviolent drug offense commuted by Trump. “When President Trump heard about me and the injustice of my story, he saw me as a person. He had compassion. And he acted,” she said. “I was once told that the only way I would ever be reunited with my family would be as a corpse. But by the grace of God and the compassion of President Donald John Trump, I stand before you tonight . . . I am well, and most importantl­y I am free.”

Americans heard from Ann Dorn, the wife of retired African American police captain David Dorn, who was killed in St. Louis on June 2 while protecting a friend’s pawnshop from looters. She said Trump is right to stand against the disorder engulfing many U.S. cities, because “violence and destructio­n are not legitimate forms of protest. They do not safeguard Black lives. They destroy them. President Trump understand­s this and has offered federal help to restore order in our communitie­s . . . . . ”

And it went on, night in and night out. Voters heard from former National Football League players such as Herschel Walker, Jack Brewer and Burgess Owens, and African Americans serving in the administra­tion such as Ben Carson and Ja’Ron Smith. They heard from rising GOP stars such as Daniel Cameron, the first African American attorney general in Kentucky history, who said that, “on criminal justice reform, Joe Biden couldn’t do it, but President Trump did. On the economy, Joe Biden couldn’t do it, but President Trump did build an economy that worked for everyone, especially minorities.”

This is a side of the president that most Americans are never shown - and so Republican­s used their stage to show it. They made a sustained, four-day push for African American votes, and the votes of every American who cares about racial justice.

In his acceptance speech, Trump continued this impassione­d appeal: “To bring prosperity to our forgotten inner cities, we worked hard to pass historic criminal justice reform, prison reform, opportunit­y zones and long-term funding of historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es, and, before the China virus came in, produced the best unemployme­nt numbers for African Americans.” He said Democrats were no friends of the African American community. “Last year, over 1,000 African Americans were murdered as a result of violent crime in just four Democrat-run cities,” he said. Trump vowed to continue supporting school choice and charter schools, “the ladder of opportunit­y for Black and Hispanic children,” and to fight to “ensure equal justice for citizens of every race, religion, color and creed.” Trump also declared, “I have done more in three years for the Black community than Joe Biden has done in 47 years. And when I’m reelected, the best is yet to come.”

It was exactly the message that reluctant Trump voters needed to hear.

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