Dayton Daily News

GOP picks Trump; he questions integrity of vote

- By Steve Peoples, Jill Colvin and Darlene Superville

While the evening programmin­g was carefully scripted at the RNC, the president’s surprise Day 1 appearance was not.

President Donald Trump turned a surprise opening-day appearance at his party’s scaleddown national convention into an opportunit­y to question the integrity of the fall election, even as his aides promised a diverse and uplifting message once the evening program shifted back to Washington, D.C., for prime time.

Trump, who was not scheduled to deliver his keynote convention address until later in the week, neverthele­ss made multiple public appearance­s throughout the first day of the four-day convention. And while the evening programmin­g was carefully scripted, Trump was not.

“The only way they can take this election away from us is if this is a rigged election,” Trump told hundreds of Republican delegates gathered in North Carolina, raising anew his unsupporte­d concerns about Americans’ expected reliance on mail voting during the pandemic. Experts say mail voting has proven remarkably secure.

The GOP convention marks a crucial moment for Trump, a first-term Repub- lican president tasked with reshaping a campaign he is losing by all accounts, at least for now.

A deep sense of pessimism has settled over the electorate 10 weeks before Election Day. Just 23% of Americans think the country is heading in the right direction, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The evening program highlighte­d the inherent tension within Trump’s Repub- lican Party. His harsh attacks against Democrats who are trying to expand mail voting and demonstrat­ors protesting deaths in police custody, for example, often delight his die-hard loyalists. Yet convention organizers are also featuring a diverse lineup with a more inclusive message designed to expand Trump’s political coalition beyond his white, work- ing-class base.

Two of the three coveted final speaking slots Monday night went to people of color who have been openly critical of Trump in the past, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and Nikki Haley, the former U.S. ambassa- dor to the United Nations. In between, the schedule called for Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son and one of the GOP’s most aggressive political attackers.

Like the Democrats the week before, the program also included a collection of average Americans: a public school teacher from Califor- nia, a small business owner from Montana and a nurse practition­er from Virginia. One of several African Amer- icans on the schedule, Geor- gia state Rep. Vernon Jones, was expected to explain why he split from fellow Dem- ocrats and announced his support for Trump this year.

Some of the pl a nned remarks for the evening program were prerecorde­d, while others were to be delivered live from a Washington auditorium.

The fact that the Repub- licans gathered at all stood in contrast to the Demo- crats, 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 in Charlotte and were over- whelmingly white.

Trump said he had made the trip to North Carolina to contrast himself with his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, who never traveled to Wisconsin, the state where the Democratic convention was originally supposed to be held.

The president has sought to minimize the toll of the coronaviru­s pandemic and he barely addressed it on Monday, but its impact was plainly evident at the Char- lotte Convention Center, where just 336 delegates gathered instead of the thousands once expected to converge on this city for a weeklong extravagan­za. Attendees sat at well-spaced tables at first and masks were mandatory, though many were seen flouting the regulation.

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 in the country and infected millions. The president accused Gov. Roy Cooper of “being in a total shutdown mode,” and claimed the restrictio­ns were aimed at trying to hurt his campaign.

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