What was trumps surprise at rnc




















Thursday afternoon. Looking forward to bringing the Party together and it will happen! Trump was scheduled to be in the nation's capital to meet with his foreign policy team, but his appearance at the RNC came as a surprise.

An RNC source told NBC News the meeting was planned last week and was originally intended to be a short, informal stop merely to take advantage of Trump's previously planned trip to D. But the New York real estate mogul ultimately spent nearly an hour huddling with GOP officials Thursday for a discussion that the source said included party unity and "a few other things" Priebus had hoped to discuss.

Trump had a productive conversation about the state of the race. The Chairman is in constant communication with all of the candidates and their campaigns about the primaries, general election, and the convention. CNN President Donald Trump is slated to accept the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday with a speech from the White House lawn -- an act ruled permissible by a federal agency.

Yet even with the legal sign-off, the Republican convention's use of the White House this week is as norm-busting as anything in the Trump presidency and has gone far beyond his predecessors' actions. More Videos Axelrod: One of most jarring scenes was naturalization ceremony First lady Melania Trump held her speech in a newly renovated Rose Garden.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo gave a pre-recorded his speech from Jerusalem during an official foreign trip, though the administration maintains his remarks were made in a personal capacity.

And throughout this week, Trump himself has used the White House as a backdrop for other programming -- including a surprise pardon and immigration naturalization ceremony. All presidents, in some way, use the powers of their office when it comes time for reelection.

That includes highlighting executive orders that benefit key voting blocs or touting foreign policy achievements available only to the sitting commander in chief. But never have those moves been so blatantly staged for political gain -- or have officials appeared so nonchalant about violating longstanding rules such as the Hatch Act, a law that is supposed to stop the federal government from affecting elections or going about its activities in a partisan manner.

Read More. Republican National Convention kicks off. Please enter email address to continue. Please enter valid email address to continue. Chrome Safari Continue. Be the first to know. They've pointed to the president's tepid efforts to address the message behind recent protests against police brutality and systemic racism as yet further evidence of his indifference to the concerns of the black community. This week, the Republicans made a determined effort to portray the president as, in fact, that community's under-appreciated champion.

Night after night, convention speakers offered personal and professional affirmations that Trump cared about black Americans. In somewhat controversial displays of presidential power during a political convention, Trump pardoned Jon Ponder, a convicted felon who now runs a programme assisting former inmates re-entering society, and oversaw the citizenship ceremony for a diverse group of immigrants.

The intended message was clear - as is the strategic intent. If Trump could chip away at the Democrats' support in this demographic, it would pay real dividends - particularly in Midwest swing states that the president narrowly won four years ago. Words of praise from the black community may also help put moderate Republicans concerned by Trump's racial divisiveness more at ease.

For more than three months, racial issues in the US have been a growing conflagration whose fires the president has at times stoked, four days of convention outreach notwithstanding. The recent unrest in Wisconsin may offer hints that if the president is re-elected, more protests and clashes like it are yet to come.

Four years ago in his convention acceptance speech, Trump promised that "the crime and violence that afflicts our nation will soon come to an end". In his inaugural address, he said that "this American carnage stops right here and stops right now". Three and a half years later, however, violent crime in the US is ticking up in some cities and protests over police brutality have at times turned ugly. Hence, the president's argument has become that it's the fault of state and local Democrats - and voters can send them a message through Trump's re-election.

Ever since the mass protests following George Floyd's death began, the president has focused his attention on the violence in places like Minneapolis, Portland, Chicago and now Kenosha, Wisconsin, rather than the police actions that instigated them. Such was once again the case on Thursday night. In his speech, the president mentioned "police misconduct" in passing, saying that the justice system would hold "wrongdoers" accountable.

The president made no mention, however, of the year-old who has been charged with murdering two protesters on Tuesday night. And when Vice-President Pence spoke of David Patrick Underwood, an Oakland officer who was killed, he implied that it was the protesters - not a man with right-wing affiliation - who has been charged with the crime. There's a growing divide in the nation over who is at fault as protests sweep through American cities.



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