Trump Makes Pitch For A Second Term In Republican Convention's Final Night
Trump Makes Pitch For A Second Term In Republican Convention's Final Night
President Donald Trump will make a crucial pitch for a second term in the White House on Thursday with a keynote address at the Republican National Convention highlighting his record in office and charting a path for the next four years.

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will make a crucial pitch for a second term in the White House on Thursday with a keynote address at the Republican National Convention highlighting his record in office and charting a path for the next four years.

The former New York businessman’s speech on the White House South Lawn, a controversial location for a partisan event, will cap a four-day convention that has portrayed him as a leader who can restore order after months of protests over racial injustice and revive an economy ravaged by the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump is seeking to turn around a re-election campaign that has been overshadowed by the pandemic, which has killed more than 179,000 people in the United States and put millions of Americans out of work.

With just over two months before the Nov. 3 vote, Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden is leading in opinion polls partly because of public discontent with Trump’s handling of the health crisis.

While Trump’s approval rating among Republicans remains high, he faces some internal dissent, including from over 100 former staff members of former Republican Senator John McCain who will publish a letter on Friday endorsing Biden, the New York Times reported. McCain was a prominent Trump critic before his death in 2018.

Trump, a former reality television host, and his advisers have set up his speech with a producer’s eye. He will address the nation with the White House as his backdrop, irking critics who say holding a political event there is a potential violation of the law.

The Hatch Act, which limits the use of federal property for political purposes, excludes the president and vice president but not other federal employees, including White House staff.

Trump, who faced criticism earlier this year for not articulating a clear vision for a second term, will be sharing his policy plans on Thursday night and in upcoming speeches on the campaign trail, a campaign official said.

Fireworks are expected over Washington’s nearby monuments at the conclusion of Trump’s speech accepting his party’s presidential nomination. He will address a large crowd on the lawn despite warnings against such gatherings because of the pandemic, which has forced both political parties to scale back their conventions and turn events mostly virtual.

Trump’s campaign says precautions against the coronavirus will be taken. The president often boasts about his crowd sizes; his campaign has largely done away with his signature rallies due to the virus.

‘NOT GROUNDED IN REALITY’

Also on Thursday, in a bit of counterprogramming, the Democrats’ vice presidential nominee, Senator Kamala Harris, plans to deliver a speech in Washington characterizing the Republican convention as a dishonest distraction from the White House’s pandemic response.

“Part of what I will be talking about is that they’re dealing in lies but also they are not grounded in reality,” Harris said during a fundraising event on Wednesday. “People are grieving. They’re grieving the loss of lives and the people they’ve loved. They’re grieving the loss of jobs. They’re grieving the loss of normalcy and consistency.”

Democrats have criticized Trump’s aggressive response to demonstrations after the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd, a Black man.

On Wednesday, Trump said he was sending federal law enforcement and the National Guard to Kenosha, Wisconsin, after violent protests there in the wake of the latest shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake, by police. Republicans at the convention have embraced his “law and order” approach and falsely accused Biden of trying to “defund the police.”

Republican officials had promised an uplifting, hopeful convention this week, though many speakers have used their time to paint dire portraits of chaos and the advent of socialism in the United States if Democrats win the White House.

Trump kicked off the week on Monday by accusing Democrats of seeking to steal the election by advocating for mail-in voting. His previous high-profile speeches have also emphasized grim themes, including his inaugural address in January 2017 that described “American carnage.”

Other speakers scheduled for Thursday include Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell; Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson; attorney Rudy Giuliani, a fierce critic of Biden and his son Hunter, and religious leader Franklin Graham.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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