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08/25/20 5:18 AM

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Nominating Trump, Republicans Rewrite His Record

"The Grand Old Meltdown"

WHEW. I was terrified i'd miss something interesting. That's satire.

President Trump and his party engaged in sweeping revisionism about his management of the coronavirus, his record on race relations and much else. And they painted a dystopian picture of what the nation would look like if Joseph R. Biden Jr. were president.

VIDEO - 4:32 Highlights From the Republican National Convention: Night 1
On the first night of the convention, Republicans mounted a misleading defense of President Trump’s record. Doug Mills/The New York Times

By Jonathan Martin, Alexander Burns and Annie Karni

Published Aug. 24, 2020
Updated Aug. 25, 2020, 12:35 a.m. ET

President Trump and his political allies mounted a fierce and misleading defense of his political record on the first night of the Republican convention on Monday, while unleashing a barrage of attacks on Joseph R. Biden Jr. and the Democratic Party that were unrelenting in their bleakness.

Hours after Republican delegates formally nominated Mr. Trump for a second term, the president and his party made plain that they intended to engage in sweeping revisionism about Mr. Trump’s management of the coronavirus pandemic, his record on race relations and much else. And they laid out a dystopian picture of what the United States would look like under a Biden administration, warning of a “vengeful mob” that would lay waste to suburban communities and turn quiet neighborhoods into war zones.

At times, the speakers and prerecorded videos appeared to be describing an alternate reality: one in which the nation was not nearing 180,000 deaths from the coronavirus; in which Mr. Trump had not consistently ignored serious warnings about the disease; in which the president had not spent much of his term appealing openly to xenophobia and racial animus; and in which someone other than Mr. Trump had presided over an economy that began crumbling in the spring.

Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, praised his father’s management of the pandemic, one of several segments asserting an unsupported narrative that the president had been a sturdy leader in a crisis even as polls show Americans believe he has handled the pandemic poorly.

“As the virus began to spread, the president acted quickly and ensured ventilators got to hospitals that needed them most,” the president’s son said, making no mention of the millions of Americans sickened and killed or the complaints from governors that they were not receiving the necessary equipment. “There is more work to do, but there is light at the end of the tunnel.”

It was part of a vehement address the younger Mr. Trump delivered that framed the election as a choice between “church, work and school” and “rioting, looting and vandalism.”

The scorched-earth approach and knowing references to phrases like “cancel culture” would not have been out of place during a Fox News prime-time segment. By that measure, the arguments might help lure some wavering Republicans, uneasy with the president’s handling of the virus, back to Mr. Trump. But it was far from clear that the programming would appeal to any undecided voters.

The Republicans’ message veered wildly, sometimes between consecutive speakers. State Representative Vernon Jones of Georgia, a Democrat who has endorsed Mr. Trump, trumpeted the president’s support for police reform, for instance, while other Black speakers appealed directly to minority voters. Minutes later, a St. Louis couple, Mark and Patricia McCloskey, who recently drew wide attention in the news media for brandishing firearms at peaceful Black protesters in their neighborhood, turned to barely veiled racial rhetoric.

“Your family will not be safe in the radical Democrats’ America,” said Ms. McCloskey, sitting with her husband in their home, warning that Mr. Biden, the Democratic nominee, wanted to “abolish the suburbs.”

The couple was followed by Kimberly Guilfoyle, a former Fox News host who is now a campaign fund-raiser. “Rioters must not be allowed to destroy our cities,” she said, before abruptly changing her tone and smiling broadly. “The best is to come,” she said, her voice rising to a shout.


Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son, praised his father’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic in pretaped remarks. Pete Marovich for
The New York Times

Hours earlier, Mr. Trump appeared before delegates in Charlotte, N.C., the initial planned site of the convention, after they conducted a roll-call vote to formally nominate him for a second term. The president promoted the economy while blistering Mr. Biden, former President Barack Obama and North Carolina’s governor, a Democrat who he claimed had sabotaged the Republican convention for political purposes.

Mr. Trump offered his remarks to a crowd that frequently broke into applause, a feature that was noticeably absent from the Democratic convention last week, which was conducted entirely online. The Republicans have made their decision to hold an in-person convention a political statement in itself.

Mr. Trump’s stew of false claims, hyperbole and invective in Charlotte dismayed some Republicans .. https://twitter.com/jeffzeleny/status/1297942590969589760 , who were hoping he and the party would use this week to stick to more scripted attacks on Mr. Biden as a tool of the left. But most Republicans recognized heading into the week that the convention would be Mr. Trump’s show and that there was little chance of redirecting his energies.

Mr. Trump is planning on speaking each day [color=red][OUCH][/color] during the four-day convention, and party officials scrambled over the weekend to fill in the schedule. It seemed inevitable, though, that the president would overwhelm his own convention, given his television-honed obsession with stagecraft and his total control of the Republican Party.

Just hours after the roll-call vote, Mr. Trump was confronted with a new embarrassment when a sex scandal ensnaring Jerry Falwell Jr. .. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/jerry-falwell-resigns-liberty.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage , the president of Liberty University and a close ally, forced Mr. Falwell to the brink of departing from the Baptist college his father founded.

Though several Trump advisers had promised an upbeat convention, the evening program was bleak from the early stages, as a sequence of Trump supporters spoke in Washington, D.C., from a dais in Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium, a formal, a wood-paneled event space with towering pillars that gave the event something of the atmosphere of a memorial service.

In that setting, Charlie Kirk, a right-wing youth activist, warned of the advance of “bitter, vengeful, deceitful activists,” while Rebecca Friedrichs, a school-choice activist from California, claimed that teachers’ unions had “morphed our schools into war zones.”

A defense of Mr. Trump’s management of the coronavirus pandemic took the form of a video that criticized the news media, Democrats and the World Health Organization, and presented a greatly distorted version of Mr. Trump’s record, casting him as a decisive leader against Democrats who had minimized the threat of the disease. The video featured three clips of Democratic governors, including Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, praising Mr. Trump in the spring, when state executives were pleading with the federal government for help and taking exceptional pains to stay on the president’s good side.

Mr. Trump’s first appearance in the evening program came in a brief segment that showed him at the White House interacting with frontline workers, who related their experiences in the health crisis as they stood in a semicircle. Mr. Trump largely deferred to the other speakers and prompted them to make comments — “Please, go ahead,” he said repeatedly — though he interjected his own commentary about the drug hydroxychloroquine, which the president had promoted aggressively as a remedy for the coronavirus despite no consensus among doctors that it was effective.

Amy Ford, a nurse from West Virginia, spoke of working on the front lines during the pandemic and credited the president’s leadership with saving lives, despite the extensive evidence that Mr. Trump had defied public health experts by playing down the threat of the virus and by opposing some of the most effective measures to control it.

“As a health care professional, I can tell you without hesitation Donald Trump’s quick action and leadership saved thousands of lives during Covid-19,” Ms. Ford said, though for much of her brief speech she focused on the benefits of telemedicine.


Nikki R. Haley, the former United Nations ambassador, criticized the foreign policy of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and
President Barack Obama. Pete Marovich for The New York Times

The speakers on Monday night reflected a Trumpified Republican Party. A few of the president’s allies in Congress, including Representatives Jim Jordan of Ohio and Steve Scalise of Louisiana, delivered remarks. A handful of participants representing the Republican Party’s scant racial diversity spoke later in the evening, among them Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, the only Black Republican in the Senate, and the former United Nations ambassador, Nikki R. Haley, who is Indian-American.

But much of the program, including the appearances by Mr. Kirk and the McCloskeys, appeared aimed at antagonizing the left and issuing stark warnings about civil disorder.

The former football star Herschel Walker, who identified himself as a longtime friend of Mr. Trump’s, pushed back on what he called unfair depictions of the president as a racist — a sign, perhaps, of Republicans’ concerns that a wide range of voters see Mr. Trump in those terms, including a sizable number of whites.

“I take it as a personal insult that people would think I would have a 37-year friendship with a racist,” said Mr. Walker, who is Black. “People who think that don’t know what they are talking about.”

In her remarks, Ms. Haley depicted Mr. Trump as a stern champion of American interests against an unfriendly international order, and attacked Mr. Biden and the Obama administration’s handling of adversaries like North Korea and Iran. Of Mr. Trump, she said, “He tells the world what it needs to hear.”

Underscoring Republicans’ determination to run against the left wing of the Democratic Party, rather than Mr. Trump’s decidedly moderate challenger, Ms. Haley warned that if Mr. Biden were elected, he would report to “Pelosi, Sanders and the squad,” employing a widely used nickname for four progressive women of color in the House.


Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina was one of the few speakers representing the party’s scant racial diversity. Pete Marovich for
The New York Times

Her remarks were as much the first volley in her widely expected 2024 presidential bid as they were a case for Mr. Trump’s re-election. She spoke about her childhood in South Carolina as “a brown girl in a Black and white world,” promoted her state’s economic gains when she was governor there and recalled her decision to remove the Confederate flag from the grounds of the State House, referring to the banner only as “a divisive symbol.”

Mr. Scott gave perhaps the most carefully crafted speech of the evening, recounting his ascent as a Black Southerner to deliver an optimistic assessment of America’s promise and to ridicule Mr. Biden for his clumsy references to race.

Much as the Democrats sought to do last week with their parade of Republicans at Mr. Biden’s convention, G.O.P. officials were hoping that the presence of people of color would provide something of a permission structure for centrist voters to back Mr. Trump.

At the start of the program’s final hour, Mr. Trump appeared in a video with several people who were held as hostages or prisoners overseas until his administration negotiated their release, and who praised the efforts of his team. Mr. Trump spoke briefly with them in turn, generating at least one dissonant moment in which he told Andrew Brunson, a pastor who was jailed in Turkey, that the country’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, had been “very good” to deal with.

[Erdogan getting an apology in that situation suggests Trump was inappropriately thinking of himself again.]

One revealing aspect of the convention was the organizers’ decision not to release a party platform. Platform documents are typically toothless, and few delegates even read them. But that Republicans would skip the process entirely illustrates the degree to which their identity is shaped more by Mr. Trump, and his critics, than by any set of policy proposals.

[See the post this post replies to "The Grand Old Meltdown."]

The degree to which Mr. Trump has reshaped the Republican Party in his own image was on display even in the Democratic Party’s counterprogramming on Monday. Mr. Biden’s campaign used the start of the convention to release a list of Republican dissenters and outcasts who are opposing Mr. Trump’s re-election and backing Mr. Biden, the former vice president, as a suitable alternative.

The most prominent new name on the list, which heavily featured long-retired lawmakers with little to lose through their dissent, was former Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona. Mr. Flake, a 57-year-old conservative, was pushed into retirement after just one term because his persistent criticism of Mr. Trump enraged Republican voters.

On Monday in Charlotte, where only party business was being conducted, Mr. Trump used his speech to focus on the strength of the stock market and to hurl all manner of attacks at Democrats.

He repeated his unfounded allegations that Mr. Obama and Mr. Biden had spied on his campaign in 2016. “We caught them doing really bad things,” he said. “Let’s see what happens. They’re trying it again.”

The president also continued his monthslong assault on voting by mail and repeated unfounded accusations that it was part of a plot by Democrats to hand the election to Mr. Biden.

Night 1 of the Republican National Convention

The Republicans Promised Uplift and Then Tried to Rewrite History
Aug. 24, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/politics/republican-convention-trump.html

Republicans Renominate Trump in a Roll Call Infused With Fear-Mongering Aug. 24, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/politics/rnc-trump.html

Networks’ Challenge: Covering a Live Convention When Falsehoods Fly Aug. 24, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/politics/trump-convention-tv-fact-check.html

Why Trump’s Approval Ratings on the Economy Remain Durable Aug. 24, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/politics/trump-economy.html

Full Transcript: Nikki Haley’s R.N.C. Speech Aug. 25, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/25/us/politics/nikki-haley-rnc-speech.html

Jonathan Martin is a national political correspondent. He has reported on a range of topics, including the 2016 presidential election and several state and congressional races, while also writing for Sports, Food and the Book Review. He is also a CNN political analyst. @jmartnyt

Alexander Burns is a national political correspondent, covering elections and political power across the country, including Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign. Before coming to The Times in 2015, he covered the 2012 presidential election for Politico. @alexburnsNYT

Annie Karni is a White House correspondent. She previously covered the White House and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign for Politico, and covered local news and politics in New York City for the New York Post and the New York Daily News. @AnnieKarni

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/us/politics/republican-convention-recap.html