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Trump, fellow Republicans paint unhinged portrait of a U.S. under Biden

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to delegates in the Charlotte Convention Center’s Richardson Ballroom in Charlotte
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to delegates in the Charlotte Convention Center’s Richardson Ballroom in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S., August 24, 2020. Travis Dove/Pool via REUTERS

BY JOSEPH AX AND JEFF MASON

President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans opened their national convention on Monday by painting a dire portrait of America if Joe Biden wins the White House in November, arguing that the 50-year moderate Democrat would usher in an era of radical socialism and chaos.

Trump set the tone early in the day when he addressed delegates in Charlotte, North Carolina, after formally securing their nomination for another term, and claimed without evidence that Democrats were trying to steal the election.

Republicans had vowed to offer an inspiring, positive message in contrast to what they characterized as a dark and gloomy Democratic convention last week. But the first night’s prime-time program featured speakers who peppered their remarks with ominous predictions if Democrats win power.

“They want to destroy this country and everything that we have fought for and hold dear,” Trump campaign adviser Kimberly Guilfoyle said. “They want to steal your liberty, your freedom. They want to control what you see, and think, and believe, so they can control how you live.”

The four-day convention opened at a critical juncture for Trump, 74, who trails Biden, 77 in national opinion polls during a pandemic that has killed more than 176,000 Americans and erased millions of jobs.

Democrats drew their own dismal picture of what four more years under Trump would look like at their convention last week.

Like its Democratic counterpart, the Republican convention was largely virtual. Most speakers addressed a quiet auditorium in Washington, D.C., bowing to the reality of the pandemic despite Trump’s having pushed for a big event in front of thousands of raucous admirers.

Trump has focused on a “law and order” response to widespread protests following the police killing of George Floyd, a Black man in Minneapolis, and he has pushed schools and businesses to reopen despite the pandemic. Both messages represent the campaign’s effort to win back suburban voters, especially women, who have abandoned the Republican Party in droves during the Trump era.

Donald Trump Jr., the president’s oldest son and Guilfoyle’s boyfriend, portrayed the ongoing civil unrest as violent assaults on small businesses by anarchists and said Democrats would fail to keep neighborhoods safe.

The dystopian language echoed that of Trump’s 2017 inaugural speech, when he vowed to end the “American carnage” of crime, poverty and manufacturing decline. It remains to be seen whether voters find the same argument as compelling after Trump has held power for more than three years.

“What you heard tonight was a parade of dark and divisive fear-mongering designed to distract from the fact that Donald Trump does not have an affirmative case to make to the American people about why he should be re-elected,” Biden deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield said.

The convention’s opening night also laid out what promises to be a central theme of the week: that Biden, a former vice president, and his running mate, California Senator Kamala Harris, will merely be puppets of radical left-wing activists.

Multiple speakers accused the moderate Biden of wanting to defund the police and ban fracking, though he has rejected both positions.

Two Republican rising stars – Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, the lone Black Republican in the U.S. Senate, and Nikki Haley, Trump’s former ambassador to the United Nations, who is Indian American – dismissed the idea that Biden and his party would be better stewards of minority voter interests.

“In much of the Democratic Party, it’s now fashionable to say that America is racist,” said Haley, widely seen as a possible future presidential contender. “That is a lie. America is not a racist country.”

Another frenetic day for Trump threatened to overshadow his attempt to recalibrate the campaign. Democrats in Congress examined U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a Trump donor, over whether he was deliberately sabotaging mail service to harm voting by mail, while one of Trump’s closest advisers, Kellyanne Conway, prepared to depart the White House.

The New York attorney general’s investigation into Trump’s family business deepened on Monday, while the National Guard was deployed in Wisconsin following unrest after a Black man was shot in the back by police.

A Reuters investigation revealed a sex scandal involving evangelical leader Jerry Falwell Jr., a high-profile Trump supporter, whose tenure at the Christian university he runs appeared in limbo.