2020
ELECTIONS
Last-minute confusion: Many Republicans still in
the dark about convention
“We had four weeks to plan this thing,” said one
person close to the organizing. “Caressing everyone’s hair in the process goes
by the wayside.”
President Donald Trump's campaign has been holding
daily calls with the Republican National Committee to coordinate the speakers
and themes of every night.
By NANCY
COOK
08/23/2020
07:28 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/23/rnc-convention-trump-400526
The
majority of Republican politicians and operatives will learn about the details
of this week’s convention in the same manner most Americans do — by watching it
unfold on TV.
The lack of
information is a byproduct of an unusual spring and summer, when the
coronavirus pandemic upended two sets of in-person convention plans for both
Charlotte, N.C., and Jacksonville, Fla., and forced top Trump officials and
allies to scramble to hastily organize and pull off the convention in roughly a
month. Planning such an event typically takes more than a year.
“We had
four weeks to plan this thing,” said one Republican close to the convention
planning. “Caressing everyone’s hair in the process goes by the wayside.”
State party
officials, delegates and operatives say they aren’t panicking about the dearth
of information, and the campaign on Sunday did release a list of speakers for
the four-day event, which is heavy on Trump family members and top
administration officials, less so on prominent Capitol Hill Republicans.
Still, the
party faithful have little idea of what to expect from this convention, which
is meant to unify Republicans and rally them and others around President Donald
Trump as he seeks re-election. Some speakers, like Lieutenant Gov. Jeanette
Nuñez of Florida, were unclear as of late last week from where they would speak
— in D.C. or their home state — or the exact format of their remarks.
The
chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party, Jim Lyons, didn’t know whether
the convention would be partially virtual or not, while a Republican
strategist, Pat Griffin, based in Boston and New Hampshire, said he was also
unclear on how the convention would play out and whether it would receive the
same amount of attention as past conventions.
As former
Rep. Lou Barletta (R-Pa.), one of the president’s staunchest allies, who
attended President Donald Trump’s event in the swing state last Thursday, put
it: “It’s like planning a wedding and having to move at the last minute, and
all that can go wrong or right in something like this. But I’m sure they’ll
have everything worked out. I don’t really know what the rest of the week will
look like as far as programming.”
“There’s
just been very little communication with Republican officials and their
staffs,” one Republican congressional aide told POLITICO. “There doesn’t seem
to be much of an organized surrogate plan. I’d be shocked if they can put
together four nights of programming without a major catastrophe.”
Other
Republicans tried to cast the lack of information as part of the routine for
the reality TV star-turned president.
“That is
how Trump operates,” said state Rep. Blaise Ingoglia of Florida, a Republican.
“He loves the big reveal. I think that’s what you are seeing here.”
Trump aides
and advisers say they are confident they will pull off a smart and slickly
produced convention, especially after watching the Democratic convention last
week and taking notes on what worked. The Trump team closely studied Republican
conventions from 2016 and 2012 for clues, and felt as though segments featuring
normal Americans were often far more powerful than speeches by career
politicians or lawmakers.
Instead of
a parade of current and former top party and establishment figures, the Trump
team wants to highlight the experiences of Americans — similar to the way the
president did in his last State of the Union address, when he highlighted a
U.S. Army veteran, a mother who hoped to send her daughter to a different
school, and Carl and Marsha Mueller, parents of Kayla Mueller, a humanitarian
aid worker kidnapped and killed by ISIS.
The
Muellers are also scheduled to speak at the Republican National Convention,
along with Alice Johnson, whose prison sentence on drug-related charges Trump
commuted, and Clarence Henderson, a civil rights figure.
The
capstone event will be the president accepting his nomination on Thursday night
from the White House.
The Trump
campaign has been holding daily calls with the Republican National Committee to
coordinate the speakers and themes of every night. Aides are hopeful this week
will help them draw a sharper contrast with former vice president Joe Biden,
the Democratic nominee — even if delegates, operatives and strategists are
unsure of the schedule.
“Last week,
it was a massive grievance fest. We didn’t hear about the vision for the
future, how their policies would help people,” Jason Miller, a senior adviser
to the Trump campaign, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday. “There’s a
reason for that. The reason is because they didn’t want to talk about the $4
trillion in tax hikes, a Green New Deal. At a time when we can’t afford to stop
our economy and our economic growth, they want to throw it in reverse and go
back to the policies of the past. That’s wrong.”
The
Republican National Convention essentially turned into two separate events this
week: The official party business and delegates would meet in Charlotte on
Sunday and Monday, while the evening televised speeches and programming would
happen Monday through Thursday. The Republican close to the convention planning
said GOP politicians and operatives “know everything they need to know about
the official business, and they can sit back and watch the show.”
“The
convention in Charlotte is really only going to last a day or two,” one
Republican operative from Pennsylvania said. “It’s not a hell of a lot that’s
going to go on.”
The split
essentially allowed the GOP to siphon the more mundane tasks of the convention
to off-screen, while the televised program will be all about Trump, his
supporters, his accomplishments and his vision for a second term — including
the way another four years under this leadership contrasts with Biden, and all
with his showman’s flair.
“When
you’re in the opposition party, obviously you attack the incumbent, and that’s
to be expected,” Harmeet Dhillon, a Fox News contributor, RNC member from
California and former chair of the San Francisco Republican Party said about
the Democrats’ convention. “But what you also expect is to further challenge or
party — or to offer their alternative vision of America. And I didn’t hear
that. I heard a very dark, negative and, frankly, false portrayal of America,
coupled with, like, platitudes, bumper-sticker slogans,”
“I think
the president is going to come in on Thursday for his acceptance speech, and
the speakers who speak before him are going to talk about facts,” Dhillon
added. “Not emotion, not like the Democrats’ stage-managed, dark vision of,
like, this is a ‘Mad Max/Beyond Thunderdome’ view of the world. It’s going to
be reality-based — what the next four years are going to bring.”
Dhillon
said most delegates from Charlotte would not attend the speech in person in
Washington, D.C., and said she was still weighing whether she should go. Her
spouse is not comfortable with extensive travel right now because of Covid-19.
The biggest
challenge for the Republicans will be trying to capture Americans’ attention at
a time of great uncertainty because of the pandemic and the economic downturn.
“One of the
things they should be concerned about, if they’re not, I’m sure they are, is
trying to drive some eyes to this thing because the Democrats did not get the
kind of attention they hoped to,” added Griffin, the Republican strategist from
Boston and New Hampshire. “Part of this may be to keep people in a little bit
of suspense in terms of what they’re doing and how they’re doing it, but I
don't know why they wouldn’t begin communicating something.”
Matt Dixon,
Gary Fineout, Carla Marinucci, Stephanie Murray and Holly Otterbein contributed
to this report.
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