San Francisco Chronicle

Debra J. Saunders: Catching glimpses of the leader Trump could be.

- Debra J. Saunders is a San Francisco Chronicle columnist. Email: dsaunders@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @DebraJSaun­ders DEBRA J. SAUNDERS

I keep waiting for the Donald Trump who shows me that he is more than a highly successful reality-TV showman, that he is a man who actually can bring America together, and yes, make this country feel great again. I saw a glimpse of that man when he said in his acceptance speech at Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena, “America is a nation of believers, dreamers and strivers that is being led by a group of censors, critics and cynics.” And to “people who work hard but no longer have a voice, I am your voice.”

I saw a glimpse of that candidate when delegates responded to mention of Hillary Clinton with the chant, “Lock her up.” Trump nimbly responded, “Let’s defeat her in November, ” choosing to save “Crooked Hillary” for another day.

I saw a glimpse of that Trump in Ivanka Trump’s introducti­on of her father. With a poised delivery, she spoke of the businessma­n whose style is “color blind and gender neutral” and whose spirit “will be unafraid to set lofty goals and relentless in his determinat­ion to achieve them.” She appealed outside the GOP base when she said, “I do not consider myself categorica­lly Republican or Democrat.” (Too true. Ivanka and her brother Eric could not vote for their father in the New York primary because they failed to register as Republican­s by the state deadline.)

Billionair­e buddies

Political convention­s purport to give the public a glimpse into the soul of the nominee. At the 2012 Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., nominee Mitt Romney invited members of his Mormon church to attest to the former Massachuse­tts governor’s goodness and accessibil­ity. Not Trump; he invited fellow rich guys. He didn’t bother trying to hide the big money. On the biggest night of Trump’s political life, Los Angeles real estate investor Tom Barrack lauded Trump’s business acumen.

Another of Trump’s billionair­e buddies, Silicon Valley’s Peter Thiel, revealed a glimpse of a new Republican­ism, shorn of GOP “family values.” Thiel won applause when he said he was proud to be gay, Republican and American. Thiel rejected “fake culture wars” — a smart gesture for a thricemarr­ied casino-operating nominee.

I never saw a fiscal conservati­ve who was willing to tell Republican­s what they’d have to give up. To the contrary, Trump talked about huge tax cuts and more government spending on infrastruc­ture.

The convention started with a stumble. Wife Melania’s Monday night speech borrowed liberally — as in, word for word — from a couple of paragraphs in Michelle Obama’s speech to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Then followed hours and hours of speculatio­n as to how the rookie mistake could have happened, followed by an admission of fault by a longtime Trump staffer, whose offer to resign Trump rejected. Political pros shook their heads at the lack of speech vetting while others — I’m guilty — wondered if Team Trump deliberate­ly inserted Michelle Obama’s words about her parents to stoke another stupid media excursion down a rabbit hole.

Trump’s America is no shining city on a hill. It’s a land overrun with undocument­ed immigrants who “are being released by the tens of thousands into our communitie­s with no regard for the impact on public safety or resources.” Trump has a point about the high number of unauthoriz­ed immigrants crossing the border. If only he had the heart to temper that assertion with the recognitio­n that the majority of undocument­ed immigrants contribute to the United States in positive ways, some by enlisting in the U.S. military.

Good questions without answers

The Republican National Convention ends leaving observers with more questions — one with no good answers. Did the Trump campaign bait the media with the “plagiarism” speech, or does the staff think it doesn’t matter what a

‘Lyin’ Ted Cruz’ was flyin’

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz addressed those at the convention Wednesday night — and refused to endorse the nominee. Instead Cruz told the audience, “Vote your conscience, vote for candidates up and down the ticket who you trust to defend our freedom and to be faithful to the Constituti­on.” Delegates booed. Former rivals lambasted the Texas senator for committing political treason during the sanctified GOP confab. Sarah Palin pronounced the speech as “career-ending.” Hillary Clinton seized the moment to tweet, “Vote your conscience” in a bid to woo GOP voters. Cruz clearly believes that Trump will crash and burn in November and that by 2020 Republican voters will be glad he defied Trump. I don’t think I ever liked Cruz better — but then, I’ve never liked him much — as he essentiall­y reneged on a pledge made by all the Republican hopefuls to support the eventual winner. The second-place Republican justified his about-face in noting he is “not a servile puppy dog.” Trump’s campaign dirty tricks included the insinuatio­n that Cruz’s Cuban-immigrant father was involved in the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy and making fun of wife Heidi Cruz’s looks. And he dubbed Cruz “Lyin’ Ted.” The irony is that in refusing to endorse the GOP nominee, Cruz showed himself to be “Lyin’ Ted.” would-be first lady says? Is Team Trump sloppy by design or does it err because of bad judgment at the very top? Is Trump as anti-immigrant and anti-Mexican as he seems, or is he pandering? Is Donald Trump serious?

 ??  ?? Sen. Ted Cruz faced more angry delegates, at a breakfast for the Texas delegation, a day after his speech.
Sen. Ted Cruz faced more angry delegates, at a breakfast for the Texas delegation, a day after his speech.
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