Trump's wife seeks to soften his image at
raucous Republican convention
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[July 19, 2016]
By Ginger Gibson and Emily Stephenson
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - Donald Trump's wife
Melania, in her first major political speech on Monday, portrayed her
husband as a talented, compassionate and unrelenting leader who would
unify rather than divide the country if elected to the White House.
The Slovenian-born jewelry designer and former model delivered the
speech, part of which strongly resembled an address given by current
First Lady Michelle Obama in 2008, to a cheering crowd at the Republican
National Convention in Cleveland after a one-minute introduction from
Trump.
The presumptive Republican nominee made a dramatic entrance, silhouetted
against a white background, to the accompaniment of Queen's 1977 rock
anthem, "We Are the Champions."
"I have been with Donald for 18 years and I have been aware of his love
for this country since we first met," the aspiring first lady told the
convention. "He's tough when he has to be, but he's also kind and fair
and caring."
"Donald wants prosperity for all Americans," she said, reading from a
teleprompter, as people applauded.
Her roughly 15-minute speech was a bid to soften the image of the New
York businessman-turned-politician, who has been accused of bigotry and
callousness for his calls to suspend Muslim immigration and deport
millions of undocumented immigrants if elected. He has also been
criticized for insults directed at women, political opponents and
journalists.
Part of the text referring to the values held by her family was
strikingly similar to a section of Michelle Obama's speech to the
Democratic convention in 2008. A Trump campaign official suggested the
similarity was the result of an error by her speech writers.
"In writing her beautiful speech, Melania's team of writers took notes
on her life's inspirations, and in some instances included fragments
that reflected her own thinking," Jason Miller, Trump's senior
communications advisor, said in a statement.
Trump's Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, has accused Trump, 70, of
lacking the experience and temperament needed to work in the Oval
Office. On Monday, Clinton, 68, used an address to a largely black
audience to cast Trump as someone who would divide the country along
racial, ethnic and religious lines.
The convention's opening night featured a string of emotional speakers
attacking Clinton's record as secretary of state under President Barack
Obama, many arguing she had made Americans vulnerable to Islamist
militancy.
"I blame Hillary Clinton personally for the death of my son," said Pat
Smith, the mother of an information management officer who was among the
four Americans killed in an attack on a U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya,
in 2012.
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, whose administration has been
credited with sharply reducing crime in the city during the 1990s and
who oversaw the city's response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks that
destroyed the World Trade Center and killed almost 3,000 people, gave a
highly charged speech slamming Clinton and making the case for Trump.
"What I did for New York, Donald Trump will do for America!" he said.
REBELLION QUASHED
The convention erupted in chaos earlier when Trump opponents inside his
party stormed out of the room and others chanted, in a failed attempt to
force a vote opposing his candidacy.
The turmoil threatened efforts by the Trump campaign to show the party
had united behind him and distracted from the day's theme of "Make
America Safe Again".
The anti-Trump forces wanted to change the party's nominating rules to
allow delegates to support alternative Republican candidates over Trump.
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Melania Trump stands with her husband Republican U.S. presidential
candidate Donald Trump at the Republican National Convention in
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. July 18, 2016. REUTERS/Mark Kauzlarich
Party leaders held a voice vote, then declared the opponents lacked
enough support, triggering pandemonium on the floor of the Cleveland
basketball arena where Trump is due to be formally nominated this
week for the Nov. 8 election.
"This entire system is rigged to force the vote for Donald Trump,"
said Kendal Unruh, a delegate from Colorado.
Trump's son and adviser, Donald Trump Jr., threatened the leaders of
the attempted revolt, saying: "Your careers are finished" in a
message posted on Twitter.
While delivering a jolt to the highly scripted program, the
rebellion by the anti-Trump forces was quashed.
But the furor, an embarrassment to Trump, put a spotlight on the
deep divisions within the party that have emerged over his
candidacy. A string of senior Republicans, worried about Trump's
temperament and policies, were already avoiding the convention.
KILLINGS OVERSHADOW CONVENTION
The gathering opened on Monday afternoon in the shadow of racially
tinged killings of police officers and black men, and as protesters
for and against Trump faced off in a plaza a few blocks from the
convention, shouting slogans at each other, separated by a wall of
police.
The protests were largely peaceful, with law enforcement officers
outnumbering demonstrators.
Sunday's shooting of three policemen in Baton Rouge, Louisiana - a
targeted attack that may have been retaliation for a series of
police killings of black Americans - hung over the gathering.
Trump criticized Obama early on Monday over the shootings, saying
the Democratic president "doesn't have a clue."
The Baton Rouge shootings happened nearly two weeks after police
fatally shot a black man there, and after another such death near
St. Paul, Minnesota, both of which sparked nationwide protests.
Five policemen were also killed in an ambush in Dallas this month.
Trump has sought to position himself as the law-and-order candidate,
in an echo of Republican Richard Nixon's successful presidential
campaign of 1968.
(Additional reporting by Amy Tennery, Michelle Conlin, Scott Malone,
Daniel Trotta and Jonathan Allen; Writing by Richard Valdmanis;
Editing by Howard Goller and John Stonestreet)
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