Trump obliterates lines between governing and campaigning in service of his reelection

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Trailing in the polls and struggling to find a message, President Trump is leveraging one of the most powerful assets he has left — his White House office — in service of his reelection bid, obliterating the lines between governing and campaigning and testing legal boundaries in ways that go well beyond his predecessors.

In recent weeks, Trump has acknowledged he was opposed to funding for the U.S. Postal Service because he does not want the money used for universal mail-in voting. He sent Homeland Security authorities to quell social justice protests in what he termed “Democrat cities.” He signed a stream of executive orders that circumvented Congress and delivered overtly partisan speeches at official White House functions, including a 54-minute Rose Garden monologue blasting Democratic rival Joe Biden last month.

Trump also has used federal resources and personnel to re-create the enthusiasm of his campaign rallies that were curtailed by the coronavirus pandemic. He invited patrons at his private golf resort in Bedminster, N.J., to attend news conferences there, with many of them heckling reporters. And he held a campaign rally in Yuma, Ariz., last week with 200 off-duty Border Patrol union members, many wearing masks emblazoned with “TRUMP” and “MAGA.” Continue reading.

3 takeaways from the first night of the Republican National Convention

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The Republican National Convention began Monday, with a slate full of future leaders of the GOP speaking in favor of President Trump.

Below, some takeaways.

1. A promise of optimism, quickly abandoned

The GOP claimed that this convention would be significantly more optimistic than Democrats’ last week. Most of what we got Monday was decidedly not that.

“The big contrast you’ll see between the Democrats’ doom-and-gloom, Donald Trump-obsessed convention will be a convention focused on real people, their stories, how the policies of the Trump administration have lifted their lives, and then an aspirational vision toward the next four years,” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said over the weekend. Continue reading.

‘I regret it’: Republican C-SPAN caller tells RNC spokesperson she won’t cast another vote for Trump

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A Republican voter explained to RNC spokesperson Elizabeth Harrington on Sunday why she no longer supports President Donald Trump because of his response to COVID-19.

During an appearance on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal program, a woman from Texas named Rosie admitted that she had voted for Trump in 2016.

“I feel right now that this young lady, Elizabeth, isn’t strong enough and knows enough to defend a Republican Party,” the woman said. “I did vote for Mr. Trump and, afterwards, I regretted it. Because in the beginning, if she pays attention… he has done lots of mistakes.” Continue reading.

Fact Checking Trump’s Convention: His Neglect Let Tens Of Thousands Die

The first night of the 2020 Republican National Convention highlighted Donald Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, with a video montage listing the various ways the administration purportedly intervened to save lives and several frontline workers, some of whom contracted COVID-19, praising Trump directly (notably while standing close together without masks).

Trump has praised himself repeatedly for his coronavirus response, saying he took actions that prevented millions of deaths.

However, public health experts disagree, saying Trump wasted the entire months of January of February during which he could have taken action to slow the spread of the coronavirus, choosing instead to publicly downplay the virus and claim without any evidence that it would just “miraculously” disappear.

Washington Post report from April said the administration wasted 70 days from Jan. 3, when it was first warned that the coronavirus posed a threat to the United States, before it finally decided to take action. Continue reading.

Mark Meadows smears Trump’s sister over audio tapes: ‘She didn’t show up for her brother’s funeral’

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White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on Sunday sought to smear the President Donald Trump’s sister, retired federal Judge Maryanne Trump Barry, after she was heard on audio calling him a liar.

“His goddamned tweet and lying, oh my God,” Barry can be heard saying in audio recorded by the president’s niece. “It’s the phoniness and this cruelty.”

On Sunday, Meadows slammed Barry during an interview on ABC’s This Week. Continue reading.

Fact-checking the first night of the 2020 Republican National Convention

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The first night of the 2020 Republican National Convention was a fire hose of false or misleading claims, mostly drawn from President Trump’s arsenal of falsehoods. Here are 19 claims that caught our attention.

As is our practice, we do not award Pinocchios for a roundup of statements made during convention events.

“The president quickly took action and shut down travel from China. Joe Biden and his Democrat allies called my father a racist and xenophobe for doing it.”

— Donald Trump Jr.

President Trump’s son overstates the impact of Trump’s actions. On Jan. 31, the president announced that effective Feb. 2, non-U.S. citizens were barred from traveling from China, but there were 11 exceptions. Meanwhile, U.S. citizens and permanent residents could still travel from China but were subject to screening and a possible 14-day quarantine. Trump’s action did not take place in a vacuum. Many airlines were canceling flights, and by our count, at least 38 countries took similar action before or at the same time the U.S. restrictions were put in place. Continue reading.

An ‘Apprentice’ producer and a TV-obsessed president: Inside the GOP’s convention scramble

After Donald Trump blew up the GOP’s convention for the second time, aides sat before a blank whiteboard and started over — with only four weeks to go.

President Donald Trump had just pulled the plug on plans for an in-person convention bash in Jacksonville, Fla., when a handful of his top political aides met in a conference room in suburban Washington, sitting in front of a blank whiteboard.

Their task seemed overwhelming: To plan out a four-day convention in four weeks — an undertaking that typically takes a year or more. It was the second time this summer that the president had blown up the GOP’s convention.

The group — which included lead convention planner and ex-White House official Tony Sayegh, deputy campaign manager Justin Clark, head of presidential operations Max Miller, and the president’s daughter-in-law, Lara Trump — had no set budget. They had no speakers lineup and no venue. In short, they had to figure out from scratch what the whole thing should look like. Continue reading.

The Memo: Trump bets it all on the base

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President Trump enters the Republican National Convention this week politically wounded — and even some members of his own party are not convinced he can stop the bleeding.

Trump has trailed his Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, throughout the campaign.

It’s not just the overall polling gap that worries some in the GOP — it’s the president’s seeming lack of interest in expanding support beyond his base. Continue reading.

A GOP convention surprise: Trump goes all-in on race

The president tried hard to soften his image on race. But can four nights of testimonials make up for four years of stoking racial divisions?

Tim Scott waxed about his family arc — “from cotton to Congress in one lifetime” — and invoked George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Nikki Haley spoke of her Indian roots and alluded to her decision to take down the Confederate flag. Herschel Walker said he’s seen “racism up close” — and it’s not Donald Trump.

For a president credibly accused of stoking racial fears and divisions throughout his term, Trump, with his choice of speakers, leaned hard into the topic during the first night of his convention on Monday. One Republican after another defended Trump’s record on race, while highlighting Joe Biden’s race-related gaffes and history pushing the 1994 crime bill.

All told, it was a surprising amount of attention paid to an issue typically associated with Democrats. Continue reading.