Trump-centric convention to emphasize Republicans’ party of one

President Donald Trump speaks to the 2020 Council for National Policy Meeting, Friday, Aug. 21, 2020, in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
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CNN :
If the cure for President Donald Trump’s political problems is more Trump, this week’s Republican National Convention will be a roaring success.
The President will show up on each night of the convention, not on the last night as is traditional. And when he isn’t grabbing the limelight, one of his relatives will be on stage or waiting in the wings. That ubiquity will feed his craving for attention and delight his supporters. But hours of Trump TV seem unlikely to win back disillusioned moderate Republicans and independents, and will play directly into Democratic claims that Trump’s self-obsession and refusal to listen makes crises worse.
A Trump campaign adviser told CNN’s Jim Acosta that aides are questioning the President’s decision to appear every night of the convention. The adviser said the effect of Trump being in the limelight each night will take away from the drama that should build to the final night of the convention.
“People are tired of pushing back on the President. That’s why he is speaking every night,” the adviser said. “He just can’t handle attention going anywhere but him.”
Last week’s smooth virtual Democratic convention raised expectations for the Trump show, not least since he portrayed his opponent Joe Biden beforehand as bumbling and senile, and then criticized the convention as boring. Trump wants a more spontaneous show, but any glitches in the live performance will add to his reputation for chaos and mismanagement.
Still, Republicans have an opening: They can do a better job than Democrats of highlighting the anger and economic disenfranchisement of working-class communities devastated by globalization and a technological revolution that destroyed blue-collar jobs. Trump’s campaign promises testimony from regular Americans who have been lifted by the President’s policies. But he will have a steep challenge to re-brand his response to the coronavirus — which has killed nearly 180,000 Americans so far on his watch — as a huge success, since Biden is promising a way out of the nightmare.
And since he can’t win the character contest, Trump needs to find a way to drive the Democrat’s moderates numbers down somehow. Brace for tales of radical “socialists,” liberals who want to shut the economy, abolish (White) suburbs, grab Americans’ guns, open the borders to marauding immigrants and surrender to foreigners.
Even so, his team is promising a festival of optimism and good feeling, after complaining that Biden’s big week, which promised to lead America into “light” from the darkness of crisis, was bleak and negative.
Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller promised a “great, uplifting message” from the President on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, after the commander-in-chief pledged a “positive” approach on Fox News on Saturday. Americans will be introduced to fellow citizens who have benefited from Trump’s policies, according to the President’s campaign.
It’s unclear however how such mood music however squares with Trump’s searing message of a land beset by burning cities, suburbs under siege and about to be overrun by left-wing “fascists” in an election he claims will be the most corrupt in history without providing any evidence to back it up.
The President also goes into the convention after making claims on social media that US Postal Service drop boxes for voting are not “Covid sanitized” and are a “”voter security disaster.” The claim prompted Twitter to label a Trump tweet for making “misleading health claims that could potentially dissuade people from participation in voting.”
The opening of the convention on Monday will compete for attention with a big Washington story — testimony by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy before a House of Representatives committee. Democrats charge that postal service reforms and staffing moves follow political pressure from Trump on one of America’s most beloved institutions designed to slow voting by mail at a time when voters are keen to avoid polling places during the pandemic.
Plasma announcement follows Trump pressure
It would not be a surprise if Trump’s convention offers Americans a highly optimistic and inaccurate picture of the worst public health crisis in a century.
Fueling fresh fears of political interference in clinical science, Trump on Sunday held a big pre-convention announcement to hail the US Food and Drug Administration’s emergency use authorization to endorse the treatment of convalescent plasma for Covid-19 patients.
The FDA decision on Sunday came days after he accused “deep state” elements in the agency of stalling approvals to hurt his reelection hopes. The therapy, made from the blood of people who have recovered from Covid-19, has shown promise, but there is not randomized clinical data on its effectiveness.
Trump has also predicted a vaccine — which aides believe could improve his hopes of a second term — will be available by or soon after Election Day, a far more optimistic projection than the timeline of most scientists and pharmaceutical experts.
The President enters the convention trailing Biden in the CNN Poll of Polls by nine points with just over two months to go with Election Day. So he needs to use it as a springboard to win back those voters who sided with him in 2016 who now appear to have tired of the drama and turmoil of his presidency.
One way to do that would be to concentrate heavily on the working-class Americans whose anger over seeing their jobs disappear to globalization and a technological revolution turned into fury against elites and establishment politicians that was skillfully channeled by the President four years ago.
Trump will also likely claim to have built the greatest US economy ever, before it fell pretty to Covid-19 lockdowns, to have drained the Washington swamp to standing up to an increasingly belligerent China and restoring respect for the US in the world. All of these achievements involve significant misinformation — a constant companion to a presidency consumed by scandal that included an impeachment drama.
In another sign of the pride his team takes in disrupting decorum and its willingness to politicize the machinery of the state, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will address the convention from Israel, ignoring a tradition that the nation’s top diplomat eschews political activity during conventions.

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