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    The Republican convention depicted an alternate reality. Will Americans buy it? | Geoffrey Kabaservice

    When Democrats held their national convention in Chicago in 1968, the radical Youth International Party – better known as the Yippies – promised to send all of the delegates into a psychedelic trance by dumping LSD into the city’s water supply. Watching the Republican National Convention take place this week in and around Washington DC, I wondered if the Yippies had finally pulled off their prank. Some of the speakers’ descriptions of Donald Trump, his presidency, and the state of the country were so far removed from reality that you’d have to be in the grip of powerful hallucinogens to believe them.In the alternate reality described by many of the Republican convention speakers, President Trump is a warm, empathetic human being and an exemplar of presidential conduct, not the narcissistic Twitter bully who consistently places familial and tribal interests over constitutional order and democratic norms. In the telling of his RNC boosters, the president acted with great speed and competence to vanquish the coronavirus – Trump’s chief economic advisor Larry Kudlow spoke about it repeatedly in the past tense in his convention address – when in reality the administration’s incoherent response has meant that US per capita death and infection rates are still among the world’s highest and the death toll has passed 180,000. Speaker after speaker praised the what Trump, in his closing address, called “the greatest economy in history,” despite the fact that the inability to contain the coronavirus has meant that unemployment is still above 10% and thousands of businesses have permanently disappeared.The diverse roster of convention speakers gave the impression that the Republican party is a big-tent party in which all are welcome, and that America (under Republican rule at any rate) is a good country in which everyone is free to live up to their potential. The speakers who sold this line with the most conviction and effectiveness were Indian-American former UN ambassador Nikki Haley and African-American Senator Tim Scott. African-American congressional candidate Kim Klacik also delivered a short but striking address, borrowing Shirley Chisholm’s slogan “unbought and unbossed” and bringing more of a policy focus than most speakers of either party with her emphasis on Opportunity Zones as a way of reviving moribund cities like Baltimore.In listening to these speakers, you could imagine a Republican party with considerable appeal to women, minorities, and young people. In reality, of course, Republicans are at huge disadvantages with all of these groups, largely because Trump has alienated them with his inflammatory rhetoric, anti-immigrant policies, and divisive pursuit of the politics of white grievance.This convention had a schizophrenic feeling because the glimmers of big-tent, diversity-minded moderation were undercut by eruptions of red meat for the base: Trump’s casual reference to “the China virus,” the McCloskeys’ thinly disguised fear of the brown intruders marching past their St Louis mansion, and the sinister image of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and other members of her multicultural Squad under the slogan, “Don’t Let Them Take Over America.”Conventions typically are occasions for political parties to try to pretend to be their best version of themselves. But this year’s gap between Republican image and reality is unusually vast because the party is desperate to regain the college-educated, suburban voters – particularly women – who mostly voted Republican in 2016 but deserted the party two years later. According to a recent Fox News poll, 61% of suburban voters disapprove of the president’s job performance while 38% approve, and among women that approval falls to only 34%.Few minorities will be convinced that Trump’s America “is not a racist country,” as Nikki Haley claimed in her convention speech, particularly at a moment when athletes in most major sports have gone on strike to protest police violence against African Americans. The convention’s video clip of Trump presiding over a White House naturalization ceremony for new citizens from countries including Ghana, Sudan, and Bangladesh won’t erase memories of his harsh policies toward immigrants. The Republican party’s inability to come up with a 2020 platform will make it hard to convince voters that it gives a damn about governing or has any serious principles beyond unconditional loyalty toward Trump.But the party’s pretense of moderation might persuade enough suburban women to return to the Republican fold to swing the election – particularly if the party can simultaneously scare them about rising violence and disorder.Republicans ever since Richard Nixon in 1968 have used “law and order” rhetoric against Democrats. Such rhetoric has the potential to swing the election this year because, almost alone among Republican scare tactics, it’s based in reality and the Democrats have great difficulty in responding to it.Homicides are up 24% this year in the country’s fifty largest cities, according to a review of crime statistics in the Wall Street Journal. Shootings and gun violence have also risen, though other types of crime fell. Crime rates are up in both Democratic- and Republican-run cities. But many progressives have demonstrated the kind of tone-deafness toward citizen concern over crime and disorder that made “law and order” such a potent issue for Republican politicians like Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Rudy Giuliani (who declared in his convention speech that Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden would be “a Trojan horse” for the party’s “pro-criminal, anti-police socialist policies”).The Republican convention coincided with protests in Kenosha, Wisconsin this week that were sparked by police shooting unarmed Jacob Blake in the back seven times at close range. On the second night of the convention, Black Lives Matter and Antifa-linked groups clashed with militia-linked counter-protestors in Kenosha. The 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse allegedly shot and killed two pro-BLM protestors with an AR-15 rifle and wounded another who was carrying a handgun.Most of the Republican convention speakers failed to distinguish between peaceful protest on the one hand and rioting on the other. But nonviolent protestors in several instances this year have shown little inclination to restrain the violent protestors among them. Joe Biden consistently has both supported peaceful protest against systemic racism and decried “needless violence” and property destruction. But sympathies for the Black Lives Matter movement has meant that some progressives have been unwilling to condemn the violence that has accompanied protests.Both the Democratic and Republican conventions were slickly produced despite the constraints imposed by the pandemic. Television ratings for the Republican convention’s opening night were down 26% from the 2016 convention – roughly the same amount by which the Democrats’ convention viewership declined. It’s difficult to conclude that either party’s convention eventually will be seen to have had a sizable impact on persuadable voters, to the extent that they exist.If the election hinges on Trump’s handling of the pandemic and the economy, or even upon his character and policies (or lack thereof), he almost certainly will lose. It’s hard to believe that the Republicans will get much traction with the claim they made repeatedly in their convention that Joe Biden will transform America into an unrecognizable Boschian hellscape of socialism. But if Democrats can’t muster an adequate response to the chaos on the streets, Trump has a real chance at victory. More

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    The real threats to American law and order are Trump's craven enablers | Robert Reich

    One week ago, Rusten Sheskey, a seven-year veteran of the Kenosha, Wisconsin, police department, fired at least seven shots at the back of a Black man named Jacob Blake as he opened his car door, leaving the 29-year-old father of five probably paralyzed from the waist down.After protests erupted, self-appointed armed militia or vigilante-type individuals rushed to Kenosha, including Kyle Rittenhouse, a white 17-year-old who traveled there and then, appearing on the streets with an AR-15 assault rifle, allegedly killed two people and wounded a third.This is pure gold for a president without a plan, a party without a platform, and a cult without a purpose other than the abject worship of Donald J Trump.To be re-elected Trump knows he has to distract the nation from the coronavirus pandemic that he has flagrantly failed to control – leaving more than 180,000 Americans dead, tens of millions jobless and at least 30 million reportedly hungry.So he’s counting on the reliable Republican dog-whistle. “Your vote,” Trump said in his speech closing the Republican convention Thursday night, “will decide whether we protect law-abiding Americans, or whether we give free rein to violent anarchists, agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens.”“We will have law and order on the streets of this country,” Vice-President Mike Pence declared the previous evening, warning “you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America.”Neither Trump nor Pence mentioned the real threats to law and order in America today, such as gun-toting agitators like Rittenhouse, who, perhaps not coincidentally, occupied a front-row seat at a Trump rally in Des Moines in January.Pence lamented the death of federal officer Dave Patrick Underwood, “shot and killed during the riots in Oakland, California”, earlier this year, implying he was killed by protesters. In fact, Underwood was shot and killed by an adherent of the boogaloo boys, an online extremist movement that’s trying to ignite a race war.Such groups have found encouragement in a president who sees “very fine people” supporting white supremacy.The threat also comes from conspiracy theorists like Marjorie Taylor Greene, the recently nominated Republican candidate for Georgia’s 14th congressional district and promoter of QAnon, whose adherents believe Trump is battling a cabal of “deep state” saboteurs who worship Satan and traffic children for sex. Trump has praised Greene as a “future Republican star” and claimed that QAnon followers “love our country”.And from people like Mary Ann Mendoza, a member of Trump’s campaign advisory board, who was scheduled to speak at the Republican convention until she retweeted an antisemitic rant about a supposed Jewish plan to enslave the world’s peoples and steal their land.Since Trump promised he would only hire ‘the best people’, 14 Trump aides, donors and advisers have been indicted or imprisonedClearly the threat also comes from hotheaded, often racist police officers who fire bullets into the backs of Black men and women or kneel on their necks so they can’t breathe. Needless to say, there was little mention at the Republican convention of Jacob Blake, and none of George Floyd or Breonna Taylor.And the threat comes from Trump’s own lackeys who have brazenly broken laws to help him attain and keep power. Since Trump promised he would only hire “the best people”, 14 Trump aides, donors and advisers have been indicted or imprisoned.Trump’s personal lawyer Rudolph W Giuliani – who ranted at the Republican convention about rioting and looting in cities with Democratic mayors – has repeatedly met with the pro-Russia Ukrainian parliamentarian Andriy Derkach, whom American intelligence has determined is “spreading claims about corruption … to undermine former Vice President Biden’s candidacy and the Democratic Party”.In addition, federal prosecutors are investigating Giuliani’s business dealings in Ukraine with two men arrested in an alleged campaign finance scheme.Trump’s new postmaster general, Louis DeJoy, who had been a major Trump campaign donor before taking over the post office, is being sued by six states and the District of Columbia for allegedly seeking to “undermine” the postal service as millions of Americans plan to vote by mail during the pandemic.Not to forget the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, who spoke to the Republican convention while on an official trip to the Middle East, in apparent violation of the Hatch Act, which prohibits officials of the executive branch other than the president and vice-president from engaging in partisan politics.You want the real threat to American law and order? It’s found in these Trump enablers and bottom-dwellers. They are the inevitable excrescence of Trump’s above-the-law, race-baiting, me-first presidency. It is from the likes of them that the rest of America is in serious need of protection. More

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    Trump must win the Midwest. But out here his breezy reelection gambit falls flat | Art Cullen

    It’s dry. So dry that my neighbor Steve Drey, the tractor parts man who hears it first, figures that the combines might start rolling through the brown corn in just a week or two. Some farmers are cutting corn for livestock silage, and it’s punky.One hundred fifty bushels per acre should be the ballpark crop yield around Storm Lake, Iowa, which is in severe drought along with much of the Corn Belt. That’s a 25% yield chop off expectations. It makes farmers itch to start harvesting before the paper-dry corn falls to a freak wind. A hurricane-like derecho wind flattened 14 million acres in the Tall Corn State just a couple weeks ago. This, as corn prices are at their lowest point in a decade.The cicadas of late August called children back to school where vulnerable teachers and staff awaited them. Most come from meatpacking households – Latino, Asian and African – whose breadwinners were ordered into close working quarters in April by a President who demanded slower virus testing. We were among the hottest spots in the land.The infection rate shot up in the college towns as the students returned. Governor Kim Reynolds ordered the bars shut down in six of the state’s 99 counties. She sailed to election in 2018 but has since watched her numbers slide as her mind melded to Trump’s. Our virus rate refuses to recede. Fourteen teacher aides in Storm Lake quit just before classes resumed for fear of infection. The governor ordered everyone back to class but didn’t tell schools how to do it. Our superintendent begged patience. She regrets saying “I just don’t know” so often when asked how to pull this off safely.Nobody does know. The state last week acknowledged that it was disseminating faulty data about Covid infection as recently as July. The meatpacking industry is doing its own testing of employees on a selective basis. Deaths and hospitalizations have ebbed here. Children have their temperatures checked at the school door. We have no idea what the infection rate really is, or how long we can conduct classes. Masks are not required, but everyone was wearing them in class this week. The kids here seem to get it. Grandma, who takes care of them after school, is nervous.It’s shouting distance of Labor Day, when people normally start fixing on the elections. Labor is restless. John Deere laid off Davenport and Waterloo workers last fall and this spring. Deere reported strong profits last week as a result, despite slumping sales from the Trump Trade Wars. There’s the disconnect between the stock market and Main Street – the Dow rises while enhanced unemployment benefits expire.Atop all this – a pandemic, a climate crisis inspiring a mega-drought and derecho, rotten farm prices and incompetent government – another unarmed black man was shot, this time in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Not so far from Minneapolis, where George Floyd became a household name. Now it’s Jacob Blake, whose mother Julia Jackson pleaded for prayer and healing on national TV, for her son, for the police, for this nation. The Bucks and Brewers refused to play.Trump simply must win Iowa and Wisconsin. So he cast a convention against this backdrop of anxiety and fear – godless looters are coming for yours – and roped in our governor, former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, and Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa to play in the tragedy. Few were inclined to listen. When the corn calls, you are too busy removing fallen trees from your machine shed. Trump dropped into the Cedar Rapids airport for an hour shortly before the convention to promise assistance after the derecho pulverized our Second City. After he left, he approved homeowner and business relief for just one of the 27 counties the governor had requested.For that, Governor Reynolds told the TV convention that Trump “had our back.” Senator Ernst, trailing Democratic challenger Theresa Greenfield in fundraising and polling, landed a prime-time cameo to praise her fearless leader. The one who knocked down soybean prices. The one who helped the corn-fueled ethanol industry implode. The one who ordered children in cages to be separated from their mothers.Farmers are anxious. Latinos are afraid. Unemployed machinists are frustrated. That prized demographic, suburban women in Urbandale next to Des Moines, are encouraging the school board to sue the governor over her in-person school orders.A few Latino organizers gathered in the park on the sweltering evening when Trump would commandeer the Rose Garden for his reality show.“Our people came here to be free of the corruption and violence,” said Storm Lake City Councilman José Ibarra. “Now it has come back to find us. Where can we go? What can we do but vote?”They said their older folks who never saw a reason before have finally found one.Even some of those farmers are wondering about Trump as they dig into a harvest so meager that wraps up as they vote. An ill wind blows for incumbents.Art Cullen is editor of The Storm Lake Times in Northwest Iowa, where he won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing on agriculture. He is a Guardian US columnist and author of the book, Storm Lake: Change, Resilience, and Hope in America’s Heartland More

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    What lies ahead as the US election enters the home stretch

    Rounding the bend after the national party conventions, the US presidential race typically enters a three-month sprint to election day, with the candidates facing off a few times to debate each other and staging boisterous rallies before crossing the finish line.This year, with the Republican national convention wrapping up on Thursday night with Donald Trump’s fearmongering speech, and the Democratic national convention being held the week before, the home stretch is shorter than ever.The coronavirus crisis pushed the conventions unusually late, and a record number of states are using absentee ballots to push voting unusually early.But both Joe Biden, the Democratic nominee, and Trump, the incumbent president, intend to hit some of the classic campaign notes from now until 3 November, while working behind the scenes to press their perceived advantages in a most unusual election year.For the Biden campaign, that means organizing volunteers to coach voters on how to navigate new sets of rules in many states for voting early or voting by mail. For Trump, that means attacking the credibility of mail-in voting and discouraging turnout that his campaign fears will favor Democrats. More