Opinion: The President believes he is losing this race

For the last night of the convention, President Donald Trump did something unusual — he largely stayed on script and on message. For a candidate who has always trusted his own political instincts, this was notable.

The President’s decision to shy away from his raucous campaign rally speaking style is the most compelling evidence that he believes he is losing this race.

It has been hard to pinpoint what percentage of voters support the President’s policy positions but are wavering in their support because they dislike his exaggerated rhetoric and constant Twitter attacks.

These voters do not like the direction of the Democratic Party, fearing it is being pulled too far left, but they are embarrassed by Trump. And if they stay home in November, Trump will lose.

The Trump campaign doesn’t need to win back Biden voters. But it does need to convince Trump-friendly voters to turn out to vote for him.

And his speech on Thursday night was for them.

Last week, the Democratic convention featured Republicans like former Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former Secretary of State Colin Powell warning about the dangers of a Trump second term. Former staffers for Mitt Romney and John McCain came out to endorse Joe Biden. And that follows several former Trump administration officials who have now turned against him publicly.

Though the final night of the RNC featured a video of Democrats for Trump, the substance of Trump’s speech itself was targeted to those more likely to fit inside the Republican tent. In fact, his speech had something for almost all of his supporters — immigration, religious liberty, free speech, jobs and the economy.

But behind the words and policy promises was another message. By staying on script, he told those who support his policies, if not his style, that they can ignore his detractors who have claimed he is unfocused and unhinged behind the scenes.

As Trump said on Thursday, “they’re coming after me because I’m fighting for you.” And that is the message that he needs to sell to those voters between now and November. But can he stay on script for a little over two months?
Sarah Isgur is a CNN political analyst. She is a staff writer at The Dispatch and an adjunct professor at George Washington University’s School of Media and Public Affairs. She previously worked on three Republican presidential campaigns and graduated from Harvard Law School.

Roxanne Jones: Trump makes a convention play to split Black votes

Roxanne Jones

Roxanne Jones

Roxanne Jones

The Republican National Convention ended exactly the way it began—with a hard push for votes from Black men.

On the fourth and final night, President Donald Trump made it clear he’s betting on Black men to help him retake the White House by showcasing Black Americans from every walk of life offering heartfelt, pre-recorded video messages, as well as a host of Black speakers pledging their allegiance to the President from a podium.

His strategy? Divide and conquer Black voters. Or, failing that, he’ll be happy if dejected Black voters stay home, as they did in 2016. That year, Black voter turnout rates for a presidential election plunged for the first time in 20 years — to 59.6%, from a high of 66.6% in 2012.

Either option could mean a win for Trump come November.

Trump knows he cannot count on Black women, who have traditionally voted Democratic and thus far, expressed little interest in voting for him. In 2016, less than 2% of Black women did, according to the Pew Research Center. But Black men? Different story. Six percent of Black men voted for Trump.

Trump sees an opening for attack and has put Black men squarely at the center of his campaign, telling America on Thursday night, “I have done more for the Black community than any president since Abraham Lincoln.

“And I have done more for the Black community than Joe Biden has done in 47 years,” adding that he is “ready to welcome millions of Democrats” into the Republican Party.

Unlike many Democrats, I can’t fault Trump here for trying. Black and brown communities across America are in chaos, reeling from a pandemic that’s disproportionately infecting and killing them, in deep despair over the police killings of unarmed Black Americans like George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Jacob Blake and countless others.

We are vulnerable. Trump knows this, and he has spent nearly four years stoking racial and gender divisions. Sadly, it is no secret that sexism and misogyny run deep in the Black community. Trump will use this to his advantage.

As it was in 2016 for Hillary Clinton it will be again in 2020 — this time for Kamala Harris, the first Black woman ever to run for Vice President: sexism will be on the ballot.

Whether it wins again is anybody’s call.

Roxanne Jones, a founding editor of ESPN Magazine and former vice president at ESPN, has been a producer, reporter and editor at the New York Daily News and The Philadelphia Inquirer. Jones is co-author of “Say it Loud: An Illustrated History of the Black Athlete.” She talks politics, sports and culture weekly on Philadelphia’s 900AM WURD.

Scott Jennings: Trump delivers in a speech that capped a successful convention

Scott Jennings

Scott Jennings

Scott Jennings

Republicans capped off a successful week with President Donald Trump’s acceptance speech tonight — heavy on reciting his administration’s accomplishments and on contrasting his record and plans with Democratic nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden.

The evening produced several powerful moments. Alice Johnson, whose prison sentence was commuted by Trump in 2018, gave a wonderful speech about faith, hope, and redemption.

Her testimony on the President’s commitment to criminal justice reform reminded Americans of one of Trump’s best and most bipartisan accomplishments.

Ann Dorn, the widow of slain St. Louis police officer David Dorn, gave one of the most gut wrenching and memorable speeches I’ve ever heard at a political convention. It was stunning to listen to her retell the night of her husband’s death.

When she said she “I relive that horror in my mind every single day,” I was moved to tears. Her plea to “shake this country from this nightmare,” was just stunning. Her testimony proved violence at protests is real, that they are not always peaceful, and have real victims. Mrs. Dorn, in fact, was in the crowd for the President’s Rose Garden acceptance address.

The President’s rather lengthy, meandering speech — ably introduced by his daughter and senior advisor, Ivanka — was serviceable, but could have used some editing.

It delivered on serious contrasts and laid down key markers on taxes, education, abortion, and public safety — the last of which will obviously be a centerpiece of the campaign. The President drew a line in the sand over controlling American cities, but made clear he won’t tolerate bad policing.

“We must remember that the overwhelming majority of police officers … are noble courageous and honorable,” he said, adding, “When there is police misconduct the justice system must hold wrongdoers fully and completely accountable.”

Ultimately, the convention delivered a key message on which the Democrats whiffed last week. Republicans can tell the difference between those who seek peace and anarchists, and will not tolerate unjust acts no matter where they are committed.

The President took aim at a topic that served him well in 2016 — political correctness — and added the element of cancel culture as well. He was smart to include this.

Ultimately, Trump did get around to laying out some second term priorities at the conclusion of his speech. I wish he had gotten to it earlier, because he needs to convince people that four more years on his watch will make people’s lives better. His agenda was perfectly fine but will need to be further fleshed out in the days ahead.

All in all, a successful GOP convention is in the books and now we see whether two weeks of political speeches made a lick of difference in the national political environment, or if the electorate is too ossified to be moved much at all.

Scott Jennings, a CNN contributor, is a former special assistant to President George W. Bush and a former campaign adviser to Sen. Mitch McConnell. He is a partner at RunSwitch Public Relations in Louisville, Kentucky. Follow him on Twitter @ScottJenningsKY.

SE Cupp: RNC’s fearmongering might work among undecided voters

SE Cupp

SE Cupp

SE Cupp

Will President Donald Trump’s RNC expand his base of voters? That’s the question many political operatives have been asking this week, and one they say is really the only one that matters.

I think the answer is probably yes.

For those of us who are political analysts, it’s hard to remember that most people aren’t paying as close attention as we are to every word Trump utters.

Most of the people don’t catalogue Trump’s many abuses the way we are, nor are they keeping master lists of his lies and failed promises.

They’re paying attention, naturally, to what’s going on in their backyards, from economic concerns to crime in their communities.

If some undecided or unaffiliated voters tuned into the RNC they would have heard countless falsehoods, exaggerations and a total whitewashing of Trump’s failed presidency.

The RNC painted a picture of an administration that had completely eradicated myriad scourges, including Covid-19, ISIS, the Middle East conflict, unemployment, the opioid crisis, criminal over-sentencing, sexism, racism and a swamp that needed draining — and Trump alone deserves all the credit.

Neither is true, nor does it tell the story of Trump’s corruption, incompetence, nepotism, cronyism, abuses of power and lawlessness.

But they also would have heard speakers paying lip service to issues they care about. And fear is a powerful motivator — sometimes more than the truth.

The fear that the RNC fomented and drew on this week was likely impactful for Americans who are — rightly or wrongly — worried about bad trade deals, disappearing manufacturing jobs, overregulation, endless wars, violence in their towns, amnesty for illegal immigrants, and a ruling class that thinks of them as loathsome.

Trump hasn’t shown an interest in expanding his base over the past four years, but the RNC produced a show that sure looked as if it did. Night four opened with testimonials from lifelong Democrats who were voting for Trump, featured multiple voices of people of color, women, and even inner-city public housing representatives — not typically the allies of Republican politicians.

And it leaned heavily on the theme that Democrats will not keep you safe, highlighting the protests in various American cities where violence has erupted, police have been attacked, and in David Dorn’s case, even murdered.
For Ann Dorn, David’s widow, the fear and pain are all too real. Many voters share it. If you don’t really follow politics but know that homicides are up in most major cities, including maybe yours or the city closest to your community, and one side has advocates who are clumsily calling to “defund the police” while the other is stridently defending them, who are you going to vote for?

Little of what the RNC speakers threatened Joe Biden or Democrats would do — including defunding the police — is 100% true. Some of it, in fact, is provably false. But it doesn’t have to be true to be effective. And I’m sure for some voters who are just now tuning in, it was.

SE Cupp is a CNN political commentator and the host of “SE Cupp Unfiltered.”

Julian Zelizer: The RNC strategy has a chance

Julian Zelizer

Julian Zelizer

Julian Zelizer

President Donald Trump entered the Republican National Convention facing a major problem — how to deal with the fact that the nation is still suffering through a devastating pandemic, which his administration has largely failed to combat.

With over 180,000 Americans lost to the virus, many schools across the country remote, thousands of businesses shuttered — and the future very much in doubt, this is not the record Trump, or any incumbent, would want to run on.

Yet the President and the Republican Party had a plan — try to reshape the way that voters understood the cold, hard facts in front of them.

When convention speakers did acknowledge the challenges of Covid-19, they often talked about it as a receding health and economic threat. Presenting the President as an effective leader who handled the crisis, Republicans argued that we had entered a new phase of recovery and revitalization.

On the second night of the convention, Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow spoke about the pandemic in the past tense, while on the final night, Ivanka Trump, the President’s daughter and adviser, praised her father, saying he showed leadership in responding swiftly and effectively to the health threat in the spring.

When convention speakers weren’t painting a rosy picture of our public health situation, they spoke about a threat to law and order that they portrayed as superseding anything happening in American hospitals or homes.

Speakers like former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani argued that America has become a country threatened by violent crime and radical Democrats. Other surrogates warned of lawless protesters on the streets who, they claimed, are attacking innocent citizens and of a progressive mob who, they argued, now controls the Democratic Party.

Their strategy might work. Much of the country has been worn down by the impact of the pandemic, and many voters may want a leader who can either assuage their fears the virus still looms or who can divert their attention to other issues altogether.

Democrats have to hope that the RNC strategy doesn’t take hold in key swing states like Wisconsin and Michigan. If Democrats are able to keep the tragic consequences of Trump’s handling of the pandemic front and center through November — without allowing the Trump campaign attacks to distract them — they will still be in a strong position to help Joe Biden win the White House. If not, Trump may have a real shot at reelection.

Julian Zelizer, a CNN political analyst, is a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University and author of the book, “Burning Down the House: Newt Gingrich, the Fall of a Speaker, and the Rise of the New Republican Party.” Follow him on Twitter @julianzelizer.

Paul Begala: From American carnage to American chaos

Paul Begala

Paul Begala

Paul Begala

The Republican National Convention is over, thanks be to God. In the immortal words of President George W. Bush, “That was some weird [stuff].”
The contours of the fall election are becoming clear. Donald Trump’s goal, it seems to me, is to try to tie Joe Biden to “rioting, looting, and vandalism,”– the unholy trinity cited by his son, Donald Trump Jr., in his hostage-tape speech.
This is American Carnage II, and Democrats should take it seriously. Republicans for decades have tried to paint Democrats as soft on crime, and the charge has stuck at times.
Democrats need to remember the painful lesson of the Swift Boat attack on John Kerry: Voters cannot process information they are not given, and a narrative — even an unfair one — can stick if you don’t provide the counter-narrative.

What is the counter-narrative to American Carnage II? To me, it seems to be American Chaos I. Riots are by definition chaos, and Democrats want to make chaos Trump’s brand.

In her magnificent speech to the Democratic convention, Michelle Obama said, “Whenever we look to this White House for some leadership or consolation or any semblance of steadiness, what we get instead is chaos, division, and a total and utter lack of empathy,” later adding, “If we have any hope of ending this chaos, we have got to vote for Joe Biden like our lives depend on it.” (Emphasis added)
In his speech, former President Bill Clinton said, “At a time like this, the Oval Office should be a command center. Instead, it’s a storm center. There’s only chaos.”
Vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris picked up the thread, telling the nation, “The constant chaos leaves us adrift. The incompetence makes us feel afraid. The callousness makes us feel alone.” The Democrats even branded the GOP Convention as the “Republican National Chaos.”
Trump’s response to the coronavirus has been chaos personified. During the GOP convention, America passed a grim milestone: more than 180,000 dead.
Meanwhile, Trump has ping-ponged from denial (“We have it totally under control“), to magical thinking (“It will just disappear“), to suggesting bizarre treatments, including disinfectant, the My Pillow guy’s oleander cure, and retweeting the Covid-cure claims of a doctor in Houston who believes having sex with demons makes one sick.
And, of course, hydroxychloroquine, the wonder drug that, umm, helps with malaria, but not so much with Covid-19.
More Americans died during the four days of the GOP convention than on 9/11, but with a few notable exceptions, like First Lady Melania Trump, you’d hardly know it. Instead Mr. Trump’s convention has given us a chaotic cocktail of grievance, bluster, and lies.

This tactical battle — carnage versus chaos — could be pivotal to winning the White House.

Paul Begala, a Democratic strategist and CNN political commentator, was a political consultant for Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign in 1992 and served as a counselor to Clinton in the White House. He is the author of the new book, “You’re Fired: The Perfect Guide to Beating Donald Trump.”

Frida Ghitis: The final night of the RNC was a profoundly sad night for America

Frida Ghitis

Frida Ghitis

Frida Ghitis

The capstone of the Republican National Convention featured the Trump campaign again brazenly violating the norms of the United States by staging a political convention on the grounds of the White House.

The decision to hold the event there broke with hundreds of years of tradition, as Trump continues to use every tool of the presidency to advance his reelection effort.

Like the other three nights, the final night brought a torrent of lies from speaker after speaker — from Kevin McCarthy to Ivanka Trump — each ludicrously pumping up Trump’s “accomplishments” to an unrecognizable and grotesque degree.

Of course, politicians exaggerate and mislead, but this was on another level.

Why would the Trump campaign go to such lengths to create a fictional heroic character out of a sitting president? Why would they take such pains to completely twist the positions of their moderate Democratic rivals?

The obvious explanation is that Trump and his team have concluded that not enough voters will support the President if he acknowledges who he and Joe Biden really are. That’s why they had to create false identities for both candidates.

As in previous nights, we heard a description of a Trump that doesn’t exist — the hardworking, compassionate, advocate of diversity, dedicated to national unity.

After almost four years of his political leadership, we know Trump. And that’s not him.

We were fed other lies, like the claim Trump himself has made hundreds of times, that he created the strongest economy in American history. That is not true.
That Democrats have made New York a desolate wasteland of crime. The evidence indicates that is false. That former Vice President Joe Biden “let ISIS terrorists rampage across the Middle East.” Also false.

Take the Trump claim that chaos will come if Biden is elected. The fact is that social unrest began under Trump’s presidency. Or the completely false assertions that Trump did a stellar job protecting against the pandemic. The facts prove precisely the opposite, and most Americans know it.

The temptation to fact-check every lie is hard to resist. But there is not enough space or time to scoop up and analyze cup after cup out of that raging river of deceit.

As for Biden, Republicans seem to have given up on his actual views, opting to misrepresent them, and, finally,to call him a “Trojan Horse,” or puppet of the far left.

The final night of the RNC was a profoundly sad night for America, another lurch away from what used to be its reverence for democracy, and a reminder of why the 2020 election is an existential test for the United States as we know it, the America we still remember.

Frida Ghitis, a former CNN producer and correspondent, is a world affairs columnist. She is a frequent opinion contributor to CNN, a contributing columnist to The Washington Post and a columnist for World Politics Review. Follow her on Twitter @fridaghitis.

Douglas Heye: Trump showed how he can win — and debates will be crucial

Douglas Heye

Douglas Heye

Douglas Heye

The ultimate question is whether or not this convention, and Donald Trump’s speech, did what it needed to do — propel the President back into office by simultaneously doubling down on his base while reaching out to new voters or previous voters now unsure about how they might vote, and making a heavier appeal to African American voters than any Republican in well over a generation.

The convention in a sense was a tale of two parties — speakers who were optimistic and forward thinking, such as Governor Nikki Haley, Senator Tim Scott, North Carolina Congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn and Alice Johnson — and a series of “Festivus” style airing of grievances, from cancel culture to the state of western civilization, issues that obviously do not resonate with a broad swath of voters.

That television ratings for the Republican convention were decidedly smaller than for the Democratic convention has to be worrying to our ratings-centric President.

Of Trump’s speech, I’m reminded of an old Frank Sinatra song, “I’ve Heard that Song Before.” We’ve heard Trump’s song before, over and over. It was a greatest hits, if you will.

But while we have heard Trump’s constant refrain, anyone who looks at the polls and says he can’t win despite being down a large margin, would be making a foolish mistake. Despite the 180,000 Covid-19 deaths in the country and the 10.2% unemployment rate, Trump can win.

As Americans, we are divided into nearly equal tribes, with a small advantage to the Democrats, and as we see increasing violence win our streets, Trump knows that he, as President, is given a longer leash and benefit of the doubt if he quells the fiery images. His campaign is keenly aware that many of the voters most likely to respond to Trump’s message on this are the suburban voters he needs.

This all means that the three forthcoming debates may play a bigger role than debates have played in years.

Something must be said about the fact that the White House was repeatedly used as a partisan political prop, and the backdrop for the President’s nomination acceptance speech.

In countries throughout the world, where strong men and dictators dominate their people, this is a standard operating procedure.

But it’s not what we do here. It’s un-American. But I fear, regardless of November’s outcome, Trump has crossed another threshold from which the country won’t cross back.

Douglas Heye is the ex-deputy chief of staff to former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, a GOP strategist and a CNN political commentator. Follow him on Twitter @dougheye.

Jen Psaki: Trump misuses The People’s House for his personal political gain

Jen Psaki

Jen Psaki

Jen Psaki

The final night of the Republican National Convention did not disappoint Trump supporters looking for some conspiracy-theory-driven red meat.

It was capped by the President’s acceptance speech, for which he invited hundreds of people to fill out an audience and applaud him, disconcertingly seated close together with few masks in sight, at a time when his own government is recommending social distancing.

And it was preceded by a parade of revisionist historical accounts– from Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor, claiming that it was “progressives” who drove the country apart after the death of George Floyd, to Senator Tom Cotton falsely alleging that Joe Biden “coddled socialist dictators in Cuba and Venezuela.”

But what was most damaging to truth and to the traditions and norms of this quadrennial process was not the words delivered, but the visual of the President of the United States delivering a political speech on the White House lawn.

To put this in perspective, when President Barack Obama was campaigning for then-Democratic nominee Hilary Clinton, he made political calls from the White House residence instead of the West Wing. We had regular senior staff meetings to discuss travel by cabinet members to make sure none came close to crossing the optical line of using taxpayer dollars for political purposes.

Contrast this to 2020, when the Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, gave a primetime convention speech from Israel.

And yet four years later, President Trump has set a new standard. By delivering his speech on the South Lawn, he has thrown away the long history of using official White House grounds for official business only–on behalf of all of the American people. But Trump has made the people’s house into a political house. And it may be hard to go back.

The conspiracy theories we will forget, but the visuals of a sitting President of the United States using the South Lawn for his most important campaign event of his presidency will leave lasting damage.

Jen Psaki, a CNN political commentator, was the White House communications director and State Department spokeswoman during the Obama administration. She is the founder of Evergreen Consulting. Follow her at @jrpsaki.

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