Monday, July 18, 2016
rump family, a few celebs and former rivals round out GOP convention speaker list
RNC communications director shares preview of convention |
One of the big headliners on Monday’s agenda is Trump’s wife Melania. Other Trump family members – including daughter Ivanka on the closing night – will speak later in the week.
Sen. Jeff Sessions, the first U.S. senator to endorse Trump and one of his most full-throated supporters in Congress, also is set to speak Monday, as are former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., and Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa.
A partial list of speakers was out earlier, but the full agenda was not made public until late Sunday afternoon.
The agenda is not exactly the celebrity-studded roster some had expected. The only professional athlete on the program is pro golfer Natalie Gulbis, after college football star Tim Tebow called his attendance "a rumor."
“Duck Dynasty” star Willie Robertson and actor Scott Baio plan to speak Monday.
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“It will be a different kind of convention,” he said, noting there won’t be “wall to wall” speakers from Washington. He said the list includes people from Trump’s personal and business life, among others.
“The personal story of Donald Trump is something that needs to be told,” he said.
A number of former rivals will be on stage, however.
Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry is set to speak Monday, to be followed later in the week by several other ex-2016 candidates including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson.
Retired Navy SEAL and author of “Lone Survivor” Marcus Luttrell and other military figures also are set to speak. Pat Smith, the mother of Benghazi attack victim Sean Smith, is set to speak on Monday as well.
Trump ready to define the true ‘change’ needed in convention speech, Manafort says
Donald Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort said Sunday that Trump’s speech accepting the Republican presidential nomination at the party’s convention will focus on telling Americans that “it’s time for a change” and that Democratic rival Hillary Clinton is the “epitome of the establishment” that should no longer rule politics.
“Her 25 years in the national spotlight are the 25 years where America has gone into decline,” Manafort told “Fox News Sunday.” "It’s time for dramatic change -- not just change where people promise changes and then go to Washington and do nothing.”
He also tried to put an end to speculation that Trump had or still has second thoughts about taking Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate.
“There was never any doubt,” Manafort said about reports that Trump was unsure as late as Thursday night about announcing Pence on Friday.
He said the Thursday night discussions were about the terror attack in Nice, France, that delayed the Pence announcement.
“What we were talking about on Thursday night was … the tragedy,” Manafort said. Trump “called Gov. Pence on Wednesday. Gov. Pence was in New York. He wasn’t there to shop.”
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“We’re going to be talking about he’s not part of Washington,” Manafort said. “He’s going to come in and, like he’s done in business, and like he’s always done in his life, he’s going to make a difference because he’s going to bring focus, purpose and change to Washington.”
He also said the Nice attack, in which at least 84 people were killed, and several other deadly terror strikes recently in the United States and elsewhere in the world should reinforce to voters why they should pick Trump, who has vowed to tighten U.S. borders and put a temporary ban on Muslims coming into the country.
“The world today is a mess because of the failure of U.S. leadership -- the leadership that (President) Obama and Clinton, as secretary of state, put in place,” Manafort said.
Dissident delegates seek last-minute showdown to block Trump from GOP nomination
CLEVELAND – Dissident delegates making a last-gasp attempt to prevent Donald Trump's nomination at the Republican National Convention say they will try forcing a state-by-state vote on the rules governing the gathering when it opens on Monday.
But even if the rebels succeed in even getting such a roll call to occur, it's one they seem very likely to lose.
"What will happen on the floor, if there's any attempt, is the party and Trump are going to rise against it," Paul Manafort, Trump's campaign chairman, told reporters on the convention floor on Sunday.
The convention's rules committee decisively defeated the dissidents seeking to make the changes late last week, thanks to an alliance between the Trump campaign and RNC leaders on that panel. Manafort said there was no longer a viable "stop Trump" movement, only some "malcontents" who don't represent the broader Republican Party.
The Trump opponents want to change the rule that requires delegates to vote for the candidate to which they were committed after state primaries and caucuses. Trump's nomination is essentially automatic under the current rules, as he has far more than the 1,237 delegates to required to win.
In what has become a bitter internal battle, a group of social conservatives also want to shift party decision-making away from GOP leaders to rank-and-file activists. They also want to ban lobbyists from serving on the 168-member Republican National Committee and prevent states from allowing independents and Democrats to vote in Republican primaries, which helped Trump.
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Some rebellious delegates are threatening to walk out if they are thwarted, perhaps on Monday. Should that occur in significant numbers, that could leave television cameras panning across rows of empty seats.
"We won't sit around and coronate a king," said Colorado delegate Kendal Unruh, who like many insurgents has backed vanquished presidential contender Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.
The full convention will consider the rules approved last week on Monday, and the rebels want to force a state-by-state roll call, with the chairman of each state delegation announcing the vote of its delegates.
They say if the question is decided by a voice vote of the entire convention, they don't trust the presiding officer to announce the results fairly.
To force that roll call vote, the rebels must gather signatures of a majority of delegates from at least seven states and submit them to convention officials.
It's questionable they have that level of support, and even if they managed to force a roll call vote, it is not likely to succeed. Shawn Steel, a RNC national committeeman from California, said Sunday his delegation was behind Trump "100 percent."
"It's the ultimate firewall," he said, referring to California, the largest of any delegation.
Separately, Cuccinelli and his allies would need signatures from at least 28 members of the 112-member rules committee to force votes on specific rules changes they want — a threshold they reached only rarely during the rules committee votes last week.
Trump, GOP say convention 'unity' key in effort to defeat Clinton
Donald Trump and other top Republicans say they want the national convention that starts Monday to be a unifying moment to bring together a divided party and defeat Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
Trump became the party's presumpitve presidential nominee in a stunning primary contest in which he defeated 16 major challengers with a message that appealed to millions of Americans disaffected by few economic opportunities, career politicians and a growing concern about national security.
“Trump isn’t part of Washington, and we’re going to be talking about he’s not part of Washington,” campaign manager Paul Manafort told “Fox News Sunday" about the convention. “He’s going to make a difference because he’s going to bring focus, purpose and change to Washington.”
However, Trump, a first-time candidate, and his insurgent campaign has alienated many Washington Republicans and donors whom he will need to defeat Clinton, in large part as a result of his comments about women, Muslims and Mexicans.
Such comments have resulted in a roller-coaster campaign that has at times appeared ready to go off the tracks. Still, Trump has continued to keep his likely general election race close with Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee.
A Washington Post/ABC poll released Sunday, the day before the start of the GOP convention in Cleveland, shows Clinton leading Trump 47-43 percent among registered voters, compared to the same poll showing her ahead last month by 12 percentage points.
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Pence, a former member of House Republican leadership with strong ties to top Republican donors, should help Trump better connect with social and fiscal conservatives and Capitol Hill leaders such as House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who remain cautious supporters.
“I am here to introduce the man who will be my partner in the campaign and in the White House to fix the rigged system,” Trump said Saturday in officially introducing Pence as his running mate. “I found a leader who will help us deliver a safe society and a prosperous society.”
From the onset of their event Saturday, Pence made clear his willingness to go after Clinton, whose trustworthiness remains a concern among likely voters, particularly amid her email scandal as secretary of state.
“Americans can choose a leader who will fight to make America great again or we can elect someone who personifies failed establishment,” the 57-year-old Pence said. “Seven-and-a-half years of Obama and Hillary Clinton weakened the world."
He said Trump wants to cut taxes while Clinton plans to raise them and that Trump wants to repeal ObamaCare “lock, stock and barrel,” while Clinton is pushing a progressive agenda to expand government-backed, mandatory health insurance.
Party officials, with the backing of Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, appear to have squashed efforts to deny Trump the nomination by manipulating the rules for delegates awarded in the state primaries and caucuses.
Whether the so-called Never Trump movement makes a last-ditch effort before Trump makes his scheduled nominee acceptance speech remains unclear.
But Priebus told “Fox News Sunday” that convention security is in place and Trump’s acceptance speech Thursday will be a pivotal moment in the White House race.
“It's Thursday night, it's Donald Trump giving that speech, the balloons coming down and people saying I can see him in the White House,” Priebus told “Fox News Sunday.”
Priebus suggested Trump will be like Ronald Reagan in 1979, capable of delivering the kind of acceptance speech that took the steam out of Democratic rival Jimmy Carter’s campaign.
“I think we're in the same place,” he said.
Priebus also dismissed concerns about the convention being disorganized, in part because the final list of convention speakers has not been made public.
“It’s not disorganized. It’s just different,” he told Fox. “I can assure you that Donald Trump and his campaign can put on a show.”
Priebus said one of his biggest convention goals is to create more party unity -- considering Washington Republicans and other wings of the party have been slow to embrace Trump and his unconventional campaign.
“I want to show the unification process continuing and for me,” he said. “I'm serious. I think Thursday night is a really big deal for our party. Trump delivering that consistent, measured, pointed message -- the balloons drop, the band plays Donald Trump running for president in the White House, that's where we need to be.”
Trump said at a rally earlier this month in North Carolina: "We need unity in the Republican Party -- and I have to be honest, I think I can win without the unity, but we need it.”
Sunday, July 17, 2016
Ohio's Kasich to speak at NAACP gathering, Trump skipping it
NAACP is nothing but All about Democrats. |
Ohio
Gov. John Kasich won't speak at the Republican National Convention
where Donald Trump is set to become his party's presidential nominee,
but he will speak to the NAACP national convention that Trump is
bypassing.
Emmalee Kalmbach, a Kasich spokeswoman, confirmed Friday to The Associated Press that Kasich will speak in Cincinnati on Sunday, the day before the RNC begins across the state in Cleveland.
Kasich has declined to endorse Trump and doesn't plan to take part in GOP convention floor proceedings in his home state, where Kasich won the GOP primary and had hoped to challenge Trump in a contested convention before the businessman's delegate lead became insurmountable.
Trump irritated NAACP leaders earlier this week by turning down their invitation, citing scheduling conflicts with the Republican convention. Presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is scheduled to speak to the NAACP on Monday.
"The governor considers it a great privilege for Ohio to host the NAACP's national convention, and he is honored to speak at their event," Kalmbach said by email.
Kasich had been listed among speakers invited to the NAACP convention that will open this weekend, but his office had been trying to work out a time for him to address the nation's oldest civil rights organization. The exact time hadn't been decided yet Friday morning.
NAACP President Cornell William Brooks told CNN earlier this week that Trump should have made the time for the civil rights leaders, especially so soon after videotaped killings of black men by police in Louisiana and Minnesota, followed by the killings of five Dallas police officers by a black sniper.
"We represent an occasion for those running for president to speak to the nation's most critical issues at a critical hour in this country," Brooks told CNN. He called the gathering a chance for Clinton and Trump to provide "a window into not only their policies, but into their heart and character as a candidate."
Republican nominees John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney in 2012 addressed the NAACP conventions.
Emmalee Kalmbach, a Kasich spokeswoman, confirmed Friday to The Associated Press that Kasich will speak in Cincinnati on Sunday, the day before the RNC begins across the state in Cleveland.
Kasich has declined to endorse Trump and doesn't plan to take part in GOP convention floor proceedings in his home state, where Kasich won the GOP primary and had hoped to challenge Trump in a contested convention before the businessman's delegate lead became insurmountable.
Trump irritated NAACP leaders earlier this week by turning down their invitation, citing scheduling conflicts with the Republican convention. Presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton is scheduled to speak to the NAACP on Monday.
"The governor considers it a great privilege for Ohio to host the NAACP's national convention, and he is honored to speak at their event," Kalmbach said by email.
Kasich had been listed among speakers invited to the NAACP convention that will open this weekend, but his office had been trying to work out a time for him to address the nation's oldest civil rights organization. The exact time hadn't been decided yet Friday morning.
NAACP President Cornell William Brooks told CNN earlier this week that Trump should have made the time for the civil rights leaders, especially so soon after videotaped killings of black men by police in Louisiana and Minnesota, followed by the killings of five Dallas police officers by a black sniper.
"We represent an occasion for those running for president to speak to the nation's most critical issues at a critical hour in this country," Brooks told CNN. He called the gathering a chance for Clinton and Trump to provide "a window into not only their policies, but into their heart and character as a candidate."
Republican nominees John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney in 2012 addressed the NAACP conventions.
At first official event, Pence, Trump set sights on Clinton, vow to restore prosperity, safety to America
Donald Trump and Indiana Gov. Mike Pence appeared on stage for the first time as a presidential and vice-presidential ticket Saturday, warning Americans about the perils of electing Hillary Clinton and vowing to make the country safe and prosperous again.
“I am here to introduce the man who will be my partner in the campaign and in the White House to fix the rigged system,” Trump said at a Hilton hotel in New York City. “I found a leader who will help us deliver a safe society and a prosperous society.”
Before bringing Pence on stage, Trump delivered a blistering stump speech that touted his agenda and attacked Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. The real estate mogul argued that Clinton's failures as secretary of state have led to a rise in global terror attacks that are destroying the world.
“The Middle East is out of control,” said Trump, who planned to hold an event Friday announcing Pence as his running mate but was forced to postpone it because of Thursday's terror attack in Nice, France, that killed at least 84 people.
“Hillary Clinton led (President) Obama right down a horrible path. … Iraq, Syria, horrible," Trump said. "Now we’re seeing unrest in Turkey.”
Trump instead tweeted on Friday that he’d selected the 57-year-old Pence, taking away much of the drama that typically comes with announcing a vice presidential nominee.
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“Let’s come together as a party, as a movement, to make America great again," Pence also said, while suggesting that he knew as early as Wednesday that he would be the nominee.
Pence, who also acknowledged growing up as a Democratic supporter, called Trump a “builder, a fighter and a patriot."
“Americans can choose a leader who will fight to make America great again, or we can elect someone who personifies failed establishment,” he said. “Seven-and-a-half years of Obama and Hillary Clinton weakened the world.”
He said Trump wants to cut taxes while Clinton plans to raise them and that Trump wants to repeal ObamaCare “lock, stock and barrel,” while Clinton is pushing a progressive agenda to expand government-backed, mandatory health insurance.
The selection of Pence, who went from dark horse to leading contender in a matter of days, should help Trump galvanize support from the party’s conservative base ahead of the Republican National Convention, which starts Monday in Cleveland.
Pence, a former member of the House Republican leadership, was among a handful of finalists in a public vetting process that included meetings and campaign events with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
He was selected from a relatively small short-list of candidates -- those liked by Trump and willing to stake their political future on the unconventional and unpredictable White House contender.
Top Trump advisers vigorously denied reports that Trump considered making a late change, with campaign chairman Paul Manafort saying Trump "never waffled once he made his decision."
Despite the claim, the Clinton campaign on Saturday released a web video contrasting clips of Trump touting his decisiveness with the timeline of the past few days. As the video ends, the words on the screen read, "Donald Trump. Always Divisive. Not so Decisive."
And Trump said Saturday that he locked onto Pence in early May when he won Indiana’s presidential primary, in large part due to Pence’s fiscal record -- delivering a balanced budget, creating a $2 million state surplus and allowing Indiana to have a AAA bond rating.
“That’s as good as it gets. The turnaround has been incredible,” said Trump, calling Pence’s early support for Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz his “single, greatest non-endorsement.”
Pence, who emerged relatively late in the vice presidential stakes, almost immediately gives the Trump campaign much-needed social conservative credentials without the kind of political baggage that Democrats had hoped to exploit in other finalists like Christie or Gingrich.
Still, the Clinton campaign has already gone on the attack, calling Pence “the most extreme pick in a generation.”
Pence, who spent 12 years in Congress and until Friday was in a tough gubernatorial re-election bid, could also help Trump with critical fundraising, considering his general election campaign has roughly $1.3 million in the bank as of the last filing.
Clinton’s campaign has $42 million and a network of donors assembled through the candidate’s lengthy career in politics.
Pence’s deputy chief of staff was a former spokesman for Koch Industries, and his chief of staff in Congress later ran the Koch brothers’ political umbrella organization.
Still, Pence is not without some negatives, particularly his handling last year of the so-called Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
The original law allowed Indiana residents and companies being sued by a private party to cite their religious beliefs as a defense. The national criticism was so damaging that it forced Pence and the state legislature to revise the law to clearly prohibit businesses from denying services to customers based on their sexual preference or gender choice.
Some supporters thought Trump had top-tier candidates in Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and first-term Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst, who might have helped Trump better connect with women voters.
However, both dropped out earlier this month. Corker declined after appearing with Trump at only one campaign event.
Pence, a Catholic, earned a law degree from Indiana University in 1986 and ran two unsuccessful congressional campaigns before getting elected in 2000.
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