Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION Trump, on huge White House stage, decrying Biden, radicals

- BY JONATHAN LEMIRE, MICHELLE L. PRICE AND KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON — Facing a fraught national moment, President Donald Trump was accepting his party’s renominati­on on a massive White House South Lawn stage Thursday night, breaking with tradition by using the executive mansion as a political backdrop and defying pandemic guidelines to address a tightly packed, largely maskless crowd.

As crises churned outside the gates, Trump was painting an optimistic vision of America’s future, including an eventual triumph over the coronaviru­s pandemic that has killed more than 175,000 people, left millions unemployed and rewritten the rules of society. But that brighter horizon can only be secured, Trump asserted, if he defeats Joe Biden, against whom he was set to unleash blistering attacks meant to erase the Democrat’s lead in the polls.

“We have spent the last four years reversing the damage Joe Biden inflicted over the last 47 years,” Trump was to say according to speech excerpts confirmed by his campaign. “At no time before have voters faced a clearer choice between two parties, two visions, two philosophi­es or two agendas.”

Presenting himself as the last barrier protecting an American way of life under siege from radical forces, Trump declared the Democratic agenda as “the most extreme set of proposals ever put forward by a major party nominee.”

As his speech brings the scaled-back Republican

National Convention to a close, Trump risks inflaming a divided nation reeling from a series of calamities, including the pandemic, a major hurricane that slammed into the Gulf Coast and nights of racial unrest and violence after Jacob Blake, a Black man, was shot by a white Wisconsin police officer.

Trump was speaking from a setting that was both familiar and controvers­ial. Despite tradition and regulation to not use the White House for purely political events,a huge stage was set up outside the executive mansion, dwarfing the trappings for some of the most important moments of past presidenci­es. The speaker’s stand was flanked by dozens

of American flags and two big video screens.

Trying to run as an insurgent as well as incumbent, Trump rarely includes calls for unity, even in a time of national uncertaint­y. He has repeatedly, if not always effectivel­y, tried to portray Biden — who is considered a moderate Democrat — as a tool of the radical left, fringe forces he has claimed don’t love their country.

The Republican­s claim that the violence that has erupted in Kenosha and some other American cities is to be blamed on Democratic governors and mayors. Vice President Mike Pence on Wednesday said that Americans wouldn’t be safe in “Joe Biden’s America.”

That drew a stern rebuke from his predecesso­r in the post.

“The problem we have right now is that we are in Donald Trump’s America,” said Biden on MSNBC. “He views this as a political benefit to him, he is rooting for more violence not less. He is pouring gasoline on the fire.”

Both parties are watching with uncertaint­y the developmen­ts in Wisconsin and cities across the nation with Republican­s leaning hard on support for law and order — with no words offered for Black victims of police violence — while falsely claiming that Biden has not condemned the lawlessnes­s. Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal attorney and New York City’s former mayor, declared that Democrats’ “silence was so deafening that it reveals an acceptance of this violence because they will accept anything they hope will defeat President Donald Trump.”

Though some of the speakers, unlike on previous nights, offered notes of sympathy to the families of Black men killed by police, Giuliani also took aim at the Black Lives Matter movement, suggesting that it, along with ANTIFA, was part of the extremist voices pushing Biden to “execute their pro-criminal, anti-police policies” and had “hijacked the protests into vicious, brutal riots.”

Along with Biden, running mate Kamala Harris offered counter-programmin­g for Trump’s primetime speech. She delivered a speech a half mile from the White House, declaring, “Donald Trump doesn’t understand the presidency.”

 ?? COMMITTEE ON ARRANGEMEN­TS FOR THE 2020 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE VIA AP ?? Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, personal attorney to President Donald Trump, speaks from New York during the Republican National Convention on Thursday.
COMMITTEE ON ARRANGEMEN­TS FOR THE 2020 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE VIA AP Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, personal attorney to President Donald Trump, speaks from New York during the Republican National Convention on Thursday.

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