Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

With speech at N.C. GOP state convention, Trump returns

- By Brian Murphy

WASHINGTON Former President Donald Trump is returning to North Carolina for one of his highest-profile appearance­s since leaving the White House.

And he’s hyping his Saturday night speech at the NCGOP state convention in Greenville in a very Trump way.

“A great honor to be speaking at the North Carolina GOP convention tomorrow night. I understand the place will be packed, all records broken!” Mr. Trump said in a statement Friday.

Mr. Trump, who carried the state during both of his presidenti­al bids, will speak at 7 p.m. at the Greenville Convention Center after a 5:30 p.m. dinner. It is a ticketed event for about 1,250 people and is sold out.

His remarks will be carried live on C-SPAN, as it’s only the second public appearance for Mr. Trump since Joe Biden was inaugurate­d as president in January. Mr. Trump also appeared at the CPAC convention in late February.

“If you’re going to put him on the road, we’ve got a builtfor-purpose event, a record crowd, it’s in Greenville where he’s done multiple events before,” NCGOP chairman Michael Whatley told Mr. Trump’s team. “North Carolina, as you know, is a huge battlegrou­nd state in 2022.”

Mr. Trump made 14 visits to North Carolina in the final year of his presidency, including an October 2020 stop in Greenville. The Republican National Convention was scheduled to be in Charlotte, but a dispute with Gov. Roy Cooper over coronaviru­s —coronaviru­s restrictio­ns led Mr. Trump to move the public portions of the event, including his acceptance speech, which ultimately was held at the White House.

Mr. Whatley said the dinner sold out in 48 hours after announcing Mr. Trump was coming. It is believed to be the first time a president or former president has attended the GOP state convention, which began Friday and runs through Sunday. The party met virtually last year for its convention due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem is speaking at the convention on Saturday afternoon.

But it’s Mr. Trump, still the most popular figure in the Republican Party and a potential 2024 presidenti­al candidate, who is the main draw. Still banned from most social media platforms, Trump has largely communicat­ed through emailed statements from his Save America PAC account, such as the one he sent Friday about his speech. (On Friday, Facebook announced it would extend Mr. Trump’s ban on the site until at least January 2023.)

Since Mr. Trump left office, a parade of Republican­s have traveled to South Florida, seeking time with Mr. Trump and support for their candidacie­s. Rep. Ted Budd and former U.S. Rep. Mark Walker, both candidates for U.S. Senate in 2022, have visited Mr. Trump in recent months.

“North Carolina produced a big victory for us, without a fraudulent outcome — missing ballots, illegal voting, dead people voting, and all of the other Democrat tricks,” Mr. Trump said in statement Friday.

“Before my Election in 2016, everybody said North Carolina was going ‘Blue,’ now they are saying that the Great State of North Carolina is surging big for Republican­s. Look at the results we have produced.”

Mr. Trump has not let go of claims that the 2020 election was somehow stolen or rigged. He’s been supportive of audits in states and localities that he lost, including Arizona and Georgia. Several dozen lawsuits from Republican­s and Trump did not change the outcome of the election and didn’t produce evidence to back up Mr. Trump’s claims.

Lately, Mr. Trump has been telling associates, according to multiple reports, that he may be “reinstated” to the presidency later this year — a process which does not exist in the Constituti­on or anywhere in American law.

Mr. Trump, known for going off-script during events, is likely to bring up the 2020 election Saturday night.

“He’s going to draw a pretty big contrast between America under his watch and America today and go pretty hard at the policies that Biden and the Democrats in Congress are pushing,” Mr. Whatley said.

What is less certain is whether Mr. Trump will give a clue as to his future plans or whether he will touch on North Carolina’s open 2022 U.S. Senate race. Republican Sen. Richard Burr, who voted to convict Mr. Trump for his role inciting the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, is not running for re-election.

Five Republican­s are in the race so far, including Mr. Budd, Mr. Walker, former Gov. Pat McCrory, former Department of Defense employee Jen Banwart and Brunswick County Commission­er Marty Cooke.

All five will address the convention Saturday morning, and a straw poll will be held Saturday afternoon. Mr. McCrory has been leading in most public polls at nearly 40%. He ran for governor three times, winning in 2012 and narrowly losing in 2016.

While the Budd and Walker campaigns have consistent­ly tried to contrast their candidates­with Mr. McCrory, the former governor has largely ignored his fellow Republican­s and focused his attention and attacks on Democratic candidates so far.

“It’ll tell you where the support is in the hall. Obviously the voters that participat­e in our convention are kind of our bedrock voters,” Mr. Whatley said. “I’ll be curious to see what the results are. I’m not really trying to hazard a guess.”

Lara Trump, Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, said she is considerin­g a run for the U.S. Senate. Lara Trump grew up in Wilmington and graduated from N.C. State University. She is not expected to attend the convention. Ms. Trump and her husband, Eric, recently purchased a $3.2 million home in Florida, taken by some as a sign that she will not run in North Carolina.

North Carolina Democrats have planned a “Day of Action” to coincide with Donald Trump’s appearance in the state. The state party has organized door knocking events in more than three dozen counties and plans to highlight the Democratic-passed American Rescue Plan, Biden’s top legislativ­e priority.

No Republican voted for the measure, though it included $1,400 checks for most Americans, which Mr. Trump had supported in his final months in office.

“While the Republican Party has chosen to throw our democracy and the truth by the wayside, President Biden and Democrats are hard at work undoing the damage of the Trump administra­tion, delivering on their promises, and getting our country back on track,” said Meredith Cuomo, the NCDP’s executive director.

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