The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Convention takeaways: All Trump, all the time

- By Jonathan Lemire and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump aggressive­ly asserted control over the Republican National Convention on Monday, overshadow­ing the prime-time speakers, as he made clear he wants voters to focus on him.

Takeaways from the first night of the convention:

Trump. Trump. And more Trump.

Never one to shy away from the spotlight, Trump showed he will be omnipresen­t at the convention, appearing every night and sure to dominate the proceeding­s.

He made certain he was highly visible Monday with some preliminar­y appearance­s and a spasm of tweets.

Traditiona­lly, the presidenti­al nominee — including Democrat Joe Biden last week — makes a fleeting convention appearance or two early in the week but largely stays on the sidelines, building anticipati­on for the acceptance speech on the final night.

Trump has tossed that convention­s’ convention aside.

He is expected to appear every night, potentiall­y joining First Lady Melania Trump and Vice President Mike Pence at their primetime speeches.

To Trump, the answer to nearly any crisis is almost always more Trump.

Some Republican operatives have expressed private worry that America is suffering from Trump fatigue.

But the president is not one to cede the stage. On Monday, he soaked in gauzy homage from supporters. He watched triumphal footage of his presidency and attack ads on Biden. And he inserted himself in the program several times, a likely preview of the next three days.

DIVERSITY COUNTERPRO­GRAMMING

Republican­s are not known as the party of diversity. But on Monday, the party showcased two of its stars, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina and the state’s former governor, Nikki Haley, to try to tell a different story.

Both argued that the president and his party had done a lot to help minorities across the nation.

“We live in a world that only wants you to believe in the bad news, racially, economical­ly and culturally-polarizing news,” said Scott, the party’s only African American senator. “We don’t give into cancel culture, or the radical — and factually baseless — belief that things are worse today than in the 1860s or the 1960s.” He added that Biden would turn the U.S. into a “socialist utopia.”

Both Scott and Haley, who is Indian-American, blasted Democrats for taking minority voters for granted and for not doing more to stop what they depicted as lawlessnes­s in American cities amid the protests that have swept the nation after George Floyd, a Black man, died under the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer.

“America is a story that’s a work in progress.

Now is the time to build on that progress, and make America even freer, fairer and better for everyone,” said Haley, who served as Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations. “That’s why it’s tragic to see so much of the Democratic Party turn a blind eye toward riots and rage.”

Trump’s campaign doesn’t expect large gains among minority voters, but it does hope that those same voters are not energized to turn out in great numbers for Biden.

Trump complained last week that Democrats “held the darkest and angriest and gloomiest convention in American history.” But on opening night of their convention, Republican­s are doing their share, spreading fear of a Biden victory on Nov. 3.

“Make no mistake: No matter where you live, your family will not be safe in the radical Democrats’ America,” Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the St. Louis couple who pointed firearms at Black Lives Matter protesters outside their house in June, were to say.

Conservati­ve activist Charlie Kirk warned the convention that a Trump victory was imperative to “ensure that our kids are raised to love America, not taught to hate our beautiful country.”

Trump, he added, “is the bodyguard of Western civilizati­on.”

Tanya Weinreis, a small business owner, warned of “the terrifying prospect of Joe Biden.”

South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott was to argue Democrats are campaignin­g on a “cultural revolution” for a “fundamenta­lly different America.”

The apocalypti­c messaging comes as Trump’s campaign strategist­s are aiming to motivate their own base with dire warnings of a Biden win — and to do their best to depress votes for the Democratic ticket from moderate voters who aren’t sold on Trump either.

The Republican National Convention is a testament to the campaign Trump wishes he could run.

For nearly six months, the coronaviru­s pandemic has upended every aspect of American society and scuttled the type of campaign — full of packed rallies and combustibl­e issues — that Trump wanted to steer.

But the lineup and themes of the convention beginning Monday made mentions of the COVID-19 pandemic only in the context of what were portrayed of Trump’s successes, with scant attention to the more than 175,000 Americans who have died, or the fact that Americans overwhelmi­ngly give the president low marks for his handling of the crisis.

Trump made an appearance at the White House with everyday Americans, without recommende­d social distancing and with no one wearing a mask.

Even the setting of the program is meant as a rebuke to the virus. While the Democrats held a virtual convention out of respect for social distancing and public health guidelines, the president has insisted on the trappings of a convention, including inperson, live speeches and a crowd of up to 1,000 people on the White House South Lawn to hear his acceptance speech Thursday night.

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 ?? NELL REDMOND - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump delivers remarks on the “Farmers to Families Food Box Program” at Flavor First Growers and Packers, Monday, Aug. 24, in Mills River, N.C.
NELL REDMOND - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump delivers remarks on the “Farmers to Families Food Box Program” at Flavor First Growers and Packers, Monday, Aug. 24, in Mills River, N.C.

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