Penticton Herald

Trump questions election integrity

- By JILL COLVIN

The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — President Donald Trump turned a surprise opening-day appearance at his party’s scaled-down national political convention into an new opportunit­y to cast doubt on the integrity of the fall election just moments after delegates nominated him for a second term.

“The only way they can take this election away from us is if this is a rigged election,” Trump said Monday as the convention kicked off with a day of “official business” in Charlotte, North Carolina before moving to Washington, D.C., for prime-time programmin­g.

Trump has sought to minimize the toll of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but its impact was plainly evident at the Charlotte Convention Center, where just several hundred people gathered instead of the thousands once expected to converge on this city for a week-long extravagan­za. Attendees sat at well-spaced tables at first and masks were mandatory, though many were seen flouting the regulation

The GOP convention is a crucial moment for Trump, who is trailing in national and battlegrou­nd state polls and under intense pressure to turn the race around. Just 23% think the country is heading in the right direction, while 75% think it’s on the wrong path, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The fact that the Republican­s gathered at all stood in sharp contrast to the Democrats, who held an all-virtual convention last week. The Democratic programmin­g included a well-received roll call video montage featuring diverse officials from across the nation. The Republican­s spoke from the ballroom and were overwhelmi­ngly white.

Trump said he had made the trip to contrast himself with his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, who never travelled to Wisconsin, the state where the Democratic convention was originally supposed to be held. “I showed up,’ he said at a later stop.

In his nearly hour-long Charlotte speech, Trump once again sowed doubts about the integrity of November’s election as he laced into mail-in voting, which experts say has proven remarkably safe.

“Be very very careful,” he told the attendees, who crowded close to the stage when Trump spoke. “This is the most important election in the history of the country. Don’t let them take it away from you.”

Trump also panned the state’s Democratic governor for restrictio­ns put in place to try to prevent the spread of the virus, which has killed more than 175,000 people and infected millions nationwide. Trump accused Gov. Roy Cooper of “being in a total shutdown mode” and claimed the restrictio­ns were aimed at trying to hurt his campaign.

Trump’s remarks stood in contrast to the positive message he and the party had said would be on display this week after they criticized the Democrats as being too negative at their convention.

Republican­s will spend the week trying to convince the American people that the president deserves a second term. Aides want the convention to recast the story of Trump’s presidency and present the election as a choice between his vision for America’s future and the one presented by Biden.

“Over the next four days, President Trump and Republican­s are going to talk about all we have achieved the past four years, and cast an aspiration­al, forwardloo­king vision about what we can achieve in the next four,” said GOP Chair Ronna McDaniel.

For both sides, it’s an unconventi­onal convention year.

The parties’ election year gatherings are typically massive events, drawing thousands of delegates, party leaders, donors, journalist­s and political junkies for a week of speeches, parties and after-parties that inject hundreds of thousands of dollars into the local economy and deliver a multiday infomercia­l for the nominee.

The coronaviru­s has changed all that, as much as Trump has resisted. While there were still signs designatin­g each state and gift bags with Republican swag, gone was the grandeur, the pomp and the pageantry. Just 336 delegates — six from each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia and U.S. territorie­s — were invited to cast proxy votes on behalf of the more than 2,500 regular delegates. And stringent safety measures were put in place, guided by a 42-page health and safety plan developed by a hired doctor.

Attendees were asked to practice enhanced social distancing and get tested prior to travel, fill out a pre-travel health questionna­ire and participat­e in a daily symptom tracker. They’re also being tested onsite, have been asked to maintain a 6-foot (1.8-meter) distance from other people and to use face coverings as a condition of participat­ion — though many attendees were seen openly flouting those rules Monday morning.

The event was met with some protests in Charlotte, and police made several arrests.

Besides the formal nomination roll call, the party also approved a handful of new resolution­s, including one that labels the Southern Poverty Law Center, which catalogues the country’s hate groups, a “radical organizati­on.” Another bemoans “cancel culture,” warning that it “has grown into erasing of history, encouragin­g lawlessnes­s, muting citizens and violating free exchange of ideas, thoughts, and speech.”

But delegates did not vote on a new 2020 platform, after a unanimous vote to forgo one this year.

“RESOLVED, That the Republican Party has and will continue to enthusiast­ically support the President’s America-first agenda,” a resolution instead reads, in part.

The focus will now shift to Washington and prime-time programmin­g that will feature well-known Trump supporters, including members of his family, outspoken conservati­ves and everyday Americans who campaign officials say have been helped by Trump’s policies.

First lady Melania Trump will speak Tuesday from the White House Rose Garden, Vice-President Mike Pence will appear from Fort McHenry in Baltimore on Wednesday and Trump will deliver his marquee acceptance speech on Thursday from the South Lawn before a crowd of supporters — blurring the lines between governing and campaignin­g yet again.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? All eyes will be on U.S. President Donald Trump at this week’s Republican National Convention which got underway, Monday.
The Associated Press All eyes will be on U.S. President Donald Trump at this week’s Republican National Convention which got underway, Monday.

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