Trump steps into Republican convention spotlight after surviving
shooting
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[July 16, 2024]
By Nathan Layne, Alexandra Ulmer, Gram Slattery and Joseph
Ax
MILWAUKEE (Reuters) - Donald Trump made a triumphant entrance to cap the
first day of the Republican National Convention, receiving a raucous
ovation from the party faithful days after surviving an assassination
attempt that has reshaped the presidential contest.
The former president walked into the Fiserv Forum in downtown Milwaukee
to an uproarious response, his ear heavily bandaged from having been
grazed by a bullet, hours after he was officially nominated to be the
party's 2024 standard-bearer.
"Fight! Fight! Fight!" the crowd chanted while pumping their fists, a
reference to Trump's own response in the moments after he was shot.
Uncharacteristically subdued, Trump waved from a box where he sat
alongside his newly anointed running mate, U.S. Senator J.D. Vance.
The attack at a Trump rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday, which killed a
supporter, underscored the nation's deeply fractured political landscape
ahead of the Nov. 5 election between Trump and Democratic President Joe
Biden.
Biden, who has portrayed Trump as a threat to U.S. democracy, condemned
the shooting and urged Americans to rely on the ballot box, not
violence, to resolve their differences. Authorities were still trying to
identify a motive for the shooting, after the gunman was killed by the
U.S. Secret Service.
In an NBC interview broadcast opposite the convention on Monday evening,
Biden said he made a mistake by saying Trump should be put in the "bullseye"
last week but added that Trump has frequently employed violent rhetoric
on the campaign trail.
Biden has ordered an independent review to determine how the gunman
could have come so close to killing Trump despite the Secret Service's
heavy security presence.
The four-day convention will culminate with Trump's prime-time address
on Thursday, when he formally accepts the party's nomination to face
Biden in a rematch of their 2020 race.
The assassination attempt, followed by the convention, has pushed Biden
to the background after weeks of speculation about whether he might drop
out of the race following a disastrous debate performance last month.
Biden again rejected the notion on Monday when pressed by NBC's Lester
Holt, focusing instead on the myriad falsehoods Trump unleashed during
the debate. The president has stepped up his unscripted appearances to
try to demonstrate his capability but has yet to assuage some Democrats'
fears about his reelection chances.
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Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald
Trump looks on during Day 1 of the Republican National Convention (RNC)
at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S., July 15, 2024.
REUTERS/Callaghan O'hare
Trump's selection of Vance, the 39-year-old author of the
best-selling "Hillbilly Elegy," completed the Ohio senator's
transformation from an outspoken Trump critic to one of his most
loyal supporters.
Vance, who shares Trump's affinity for political brawling, is likely
to energize core Republicans, but it is less clear whether he can
broaden the ticket's appeal to moderate and independent voters wary
of another Trump term.
Biden called Vance a Trump "clone" on Monday, and Democrats pounced
on Vance's opposition to abortion rights, an issue that has proven
damaging to Republicans.
In a Fox News appearance on Monday night, Vance said he backed
Trump's position that each state should decide for itself whether to
permit abortion.
The race between Trump and Biden remains close, according to public
opinion polls, though Trump leads in several swing states likely to
decide the election.
Monday began with the latest in a string of recent legal victories
for Trump, when U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon threw out federal
charges in Florida accusing him of illegally retaining classified
documents.
Trump is due to be sentenced in New York in September for trying to
cover up a hush money payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in the
weeks before his 2016 election victory.
But his other two indictments on federal charges in Washington and
state charges in Georgia - both related to his efforts to overturn
his 2020 election defeat - are mired in delays and could be
imperiled after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in July that he had
immunity for many of his official acts as president.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne, Alexandra Ulmer and Gram Slattery in
Milwaukee; Writing by Joseph Ax; Editing by Howard Goller)
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