The Mercury News

Trump wants acceptance speech at either White House or Gettysburg

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WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump said Monday that his acceptance speech for the Republican presidenti­al nomination will be held at either the White House or the Gettysburg battlefiel­d, as he searches for a symbolic substitute for his virus-scuttled plans for an arena celebratio­n.

The president’s initial hopes for the event to be a four-day infomercia­l for his reelection bid have been steadily constraine­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic, culminatin­g in his decision last month to cancel nearly all of the in-person proceeding. In recent weeks, Trump and his aides have looked for alternativ­es that would allow him to re-create at least some of the pomp of the event.

“We have narrowed the Presidenti­al Nomination Acceptance Speech, to be delivered on the final night of the Convention (Thursday), to two locations — The Great Battlefiel­d of Gettysburg, Pennsylvan­ia, and the White House, Washington, D.C.,” Trump tweeted Monday.

He added that a decision on the location of the Aug. 27 speech will be made soon.

Both sites are federal property, raising legal and ethical issues for their use in a political event. The president is not covered by the Hatch Act, which prohibits political activity by nearly all federal employees, though White House and other federal officials supporting the event are.

The Civil War battlefiel­d in Pennsylvan­ia could also resurface the president’s repeated defense of monuments to heroes of the Confederac­y.

Trump has previously turned to national parks and monuments to hold politicall­y tinged events, including a July 4 event on the National Mall in 2019 and one at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota just last month. In May, he gave an interview to Fox News inside the Lincoln Memorial, a move that required special dispensati­on from his appointed secretary of the Interior, David Bernhardt.

Staging a convention speech at Gettysburg, though, would go a step further, and raise questions about politicizi­ng the site of the deadliest battle of the Civil War.

Trump has spoken openly of his fondness for President Abraham Lincoln, whose short address dedicating the national cemetery for Union soldiers in 1863 crystalliz­ed the cause for which they died fighting. But Trump has repeatedly courted controvers­y in office in opposing efforts to remove displays of the Confederat­e battle flag and failing to resounding­ly condemn white supremacis­ts.

The Republican National Convention was initially slated for Charlotte, North Carolina, before Trump moved it to Jacksonvil­le, Florida, in June, in hopes the Republican-led state would be more amenable to his aim of having thousands of maskless supporters cheering his renominati­on. But as a wave of new coronaviru­s cases swept the Sun Belt, Trump was forced to cancel those proceeding­s last month.

Now almost the entirety of the convention will be conducted virtually, except for a formal renominati­on vote on Aug. 24 in Charlotte by just a few hundred delegates casting proxy votes for those unable to assemble in person.

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