More stories

  • in

    Protesters try to drown out Donald Trump's acceptance speech on last day of RNC – video highlights

    Play Video

    3:48

    Donald Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday, as protesters outside the White House did their best to drown out his speech. Here are highlights of the last night of the 2020 Republican national convention
    RNC: Trump paints Biden as a ‘radical’ candidate and a danger to America
    Trump unleashes diatribe of falsehoods and baseless attacks in RNC finale
    America reacts to Donald Trump’s RNC acceptance speech – US politics live

    Topics

    Republican national convention 2020

    Donald Trump

    Republicans More

  • in

    Trump unleashes diatribe of falsehoods and baseless attacks in RNC finale

    You write him off at your peril. Donald Trump stood at one of America’s most hallowed spaces on Thursday – the White House – and bent it to his will, just as he has bent the Republican party and swaths of America.The US president gripped a lectern with the presidential seal on a red carpeted platform. Behind him was a row of American national flags and the magnificent south portico of the White House, traditionally a neutral space for governing, not political rallies. At each side were beaming members of the Trump dynasty and two giant Orwellian TV screens.Before him, enveloped in gloom as the clock struck 11pm on a balmy summer night in Washington, were 1,500 people obediently standing, clapping, whooping, booing his foes and chanting “Four more years!” Like past charismatic leaders who paid lipservice to democracy, Trump understands political theatre, plays crowds like a fiddle and feeds off their energy.It was a formidable spectacle on several levels. With people crammed together and wearing “Make America great again” hats rather than face masks, this was performance art that sent the message that the coronavirus pandemic is over, even though more people have died from it during this week’s Republican national convention than in the terror attacks of 11 September 2001.The mood of exuberance and self-confidence also implied that, whatever the death toll, whatever the huge unemployment figures, whatever the polls say, the 2020 presidential election is far from over. Trump’s grand setting in the nation’s capital, culminating in fireworks at the Washington monument and opera singers, contrasted with opponent Joe Biden’s speech last week to a silent, largely empty auditorium in Wilmington, Delaware.And whereas the raucous crowds at a convention hall in Cleveland four years ago, with their chants of “Lock her up!”, hinted at humanity’s darkest authoritarian impulses returning to the surface, this more polite and genteel version unfolding at the seat of American power was no less ominous. More

  • in

    Donald Trump slams Joe Biden in Republican nomination acceptance speech – video

    Play Video

    2:27

    Donald Trump formally accepted the Republican party’s nomination for re-election in front of the White House on Thursday night.
    ‘This is the most important election in the history of our country,’ Trump said after he ‘profoundly’ accepted his party’s nomination.
    Trump went on to excoriate the Democratic party and argue that the choice for voters is between a president who has a record of unmatched accomplishments and an opposition party and candidate eager to tear down the country.
    RNC: Trump accepts nomination and attacks Biden as eager to ‘tear down the country’
    Republican national convention 2020

    Topics

    Trump administration

    Donald Trump

    US politics

    US elections 2020

    Republican national convention 2020

    Republicans More

  • in

    Donald Trump pushes falsehoods about Nato, border wall and coronavirus in RNC speech – live

    President rails against Joe Biden in dark address
    Crowd prompts fears over Covid-19 spread
    Protesters gather outside White House on convention’s final night
    Sign up for our First Thing newsletter

    LIVE
    Updated

    Play Video

    Republican national convention: Trump accepts presidential nomination

    Key events

    Show

    10.39pm EDT22:39
    Trump’s speech continues dark tone of Republican convention

    10.31pm EDT22:31
    Trump accepts Republican presidential nomination

    10.24pm EDT22:24
    Trump takes the stage to accept Republican nomination

    10.10pm EDT22:10
    Ivanka Trump introduces her father at convention

    10.00pm EDT22:00
    Alice Johnson praises Trump for her commutation

    9.47pm EDT21:47
    Giuliani falsely accuses BLM of having ‘hijacked peaceful protests’

    9.22pm EDT21:22
    Protesters gather outside White House on last night of RNC

    Live feed

    Show

    11.22pm EDT23:22

    Trump made his first reference to the unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, as protests continue over the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
    But the president did not mention the name of Blake, who was repeatedly shot in the back by Kenosha police officers.
    Instead, like other convention speakers this week, Trump condemned “the rioting, looting, arson and violence we have seen in Democrat-run cities.”

    11.22pm EDT23:22

    During the Democrat Convention, the words “Under God” were removed from the Pledge of Allegiance – not once, but twice,” Trump said. “The fact is, this is where they are coming from.”
    The fact is, that is a bit misleading.
    During the DNC, several caucuses were organized alongside the main convention.
    At the LGBTQ Caucus Meeting and at the Muslim Delegates and Allies Assembly, the words “under God” were omitted
    But during the primetime DNC broadcasts, the full Pledge of Allegiance was recited with the word God.
    – Maanvi Singh

    11.20pm EDT23:20

    Ann Dorn, the widow of officer David Dorn who addressed the convention earlier tonight, is in the audience for Trump’s speech at the White House.
    The president recounted how Dorn was fatally shot during unrest in St Louis earlier this year.
    “To each of you: we will never forget the heroic legacy of Captain David Dorn,” Trump said.

    11.15pm EDT23:15

    “Days after taking office,” Trump said, his administration “ended the unfair and very costly Paris climate accord.”
    That is not what happened.
    Trump served notice that the US would withdraw from the Paris climate accord in 2019, not the day after he took office in 2017. Due to the accord’s rule of withdrawal, the US will not officially exit the agreement until 4 November this year.
    Read the Guardian’s Climate Countdown series, which spotlights what the withdrawal will mean for the US:
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.16pm EDT

    11.15pm EDT23:15

    Repeating a line from one of his campaign commercials, Trump said, “No one will be safe in Biden’s America.”
    Amid nationwide protests against racism and police brutality, the president added, “My administration will always stand with the men and women of law enforcement.”
    Mike Pence delivered a similar line in his convention speech last night, and Biden responded to the vice-president in a statement today.
    “Did Mike Pence forget Donald Trump is president? Is Donald Trump even aware he’s president?” Biden said in the statement.
    “These are not images from some imagined ‘Joe Biden’s America’ in the future. These are images from Donald Trump’s America today. The violence we’re witnessing is happening under Donald Trump.”

    Updated
    at 11.15pm EDT

    11.11pm EDT23:11

    Trump blamed Joe Biden and the Democratic party for the recent power outages in California amid an intense heatwave.
    “How can Joe Biden claim to be an ally of the light when his own party can’t even keep the lights on?” Trump said, prompting laughter from the crowd gathered on the South Lawn.

    Updated
    at 11.16pm EDT

    11.08pm EDT23:08

    Trump promised that a coronavirus vaccine would be developed by the end of this year.
    “We will have a safe and effective vaccine this year, and together we will crush the virus,” the president said.
    There are multiple vaccine candidates that are currently being developed, and Dr Anthony Fauci has previously said he is cautiously optimistic a coronavirus vaccine will be approved by the end of this year or early next year.

    11.07pm EDT23:07

    Here’s what Trump said on economic relief for Americans affected by the coronavirus crisis:

    We enacted the largest package of financial relief in American history. Thanks to our Paycheck Protection Program, we have saved or supported more than 50 million American jobs. As a result, we have seen the smallest economic contraction of any major western nation, and we are recovering much faster. Over the past three months, we have gained over 9 million jobs, a new record.

    A bit of context here:
    The PPP program expired, and the Trump administration and Republicans couldn’t make a deal with congressional Democrats to extend the program.
    The US gained 9m jobs, after losing 22m as the pandemic hit.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.13pm EDT

    11.04pm EDT23:04

    “We are focusing on the science, the facts and the data” on coronavirus, Trump said.
    Trump has not been doing that. The Trump administration has continuously undermined science and facts in its response to the coronavirus pandemic.
    Here’s my explainer from a while back:

    Play Video

    5:28

    From miracle cures to slowing testing: how Trump has defied science on coronavirus – video explainer
    – Maanvi Singh

    11.01pm EDT23:01

    After Democrats spent a week highlighting Joe Biden’s empathy and compassion, Trump used his convention speech to dismiss the importance of such character traits.
    “The laid off workers in Michigan, Ohio, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and many other states didn’t want Joe Biden’s hollow words of empathy, they wanted their jobs back,” Trump said.
    Over the past four nights, a number of Trump’s advisers and family members have tried to paint him as a compassionate president, although those comments generally lacked examples of such behavior.

    10.59pm EDT22:59

    Trump said he “passed VA Accountability and VA Choice”. He did not.
    President Barack Obama signed the Veterans Choice Act in 2014. Trump expanded it, under a 2018 law called the Mission Act.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.15pm EDT

    10.57pm EDT22:57

    Trump continued his attacks against Joe Biden, painting the Democrat’s long career in government as a string of failures.
    “Biden’s record is a shameful roll call of the most catastrophic betrayals and blunders in our lifetime,” Trump said. “He has spent his entire career on the wrong side of history.”
    The president has already mentioned Biden’s name dozens of times in his convention speech, which is noteworthy given Biden never once said Trump’s name in his speech last week.

    10.55pm EDT22:55

    Some quick fact checks:
    Donald Trump said this is the first time in 20 years that Nato members have increased spending. The president likes to repeat this false claim. But he’s still wrong: Nato Europe and Canada increased defense spending in 2015 and 2016, before Trump took office.
    Trump touted the southern border wall, saying that 300 miles were built. That more or less true, if embellished – there’s new wall across about 245 miles of the border – but only thirty miles of wall has been erected where there was no barrier before.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 10.57pm EDT

    10.53pm EDT22:53

    Trump repeated his outlandish claim that he has done more for the African American community than any president since Abraham Lincoln.
    He added, “I have done more in three years for the black community than Joe Biden has done in 47 years.”
    Trump apparently believes his accomplishments for African Americans exceed those of, for example, the Democratic president Lyndon Johnson, who signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

    Updated
    at 10.55pm EDT

    10.48pm EDT22:48

    Trump praised his own record on a wide range of issues, exaggerating his accomplishments and spewing a number of falsehoods.
    On immigration, Trump said, “The wall will soon be complete and it’s working beyond our wildest expectations.”
    That is not true. The border wall is nowhere near complete, and Trump has built very few new miles of the wall. More

  • in

    RNC: Trump accepts nomination and attacks Biden as eager to ‘tear down the country’

    Donald Trump formally accepted the Republican Party’s nomination for re-election in front of the White House on Thursday night.“This is the most important election in the history of our country. At no time before have voters faced a clearer choice between two parties, two visions, two philosophies, or two agendas,” Trump said after he “profoundly” accepted his party’s nomination.Trump went on to excoriate the Democratic party and argue that the choice for voters is between a president who has a record of unmatched accomplishments and an opposition party and candidate eager to tear down the country.“At the Democrat national convention, Joe Biden and his party repeatedly assailed America as a land of racial, economic, and social injustice,” Trump said. “So tonight, I ask you a very simple question: How can the Democrat party ask to lead our country when it spends so much time tearing down our country?”Trump’s remarks were the capstone of a night where speakers focused on national security and safety, describing the country as rife with chaos and lawlessness in the streets. Speakers also repeatedly stressed that Trump was a longstanding friend of the African American community and minorities.Few mentioned the coronavirus pandemic, which has left more than 180,000 Americans dead. Trump himself delivered his speech in front of an audience of around 1,500 officials and supporters at the White House, sitting packed together, few wearing masks.“I did what our political establishment never expected and could never forgive, breaking the cardinal rule of Washington politics,” Trump said. “I kept my promises.”Trump has kept around half of his 2016 campaign pledges, according to Politifact. Trump’s address was the main event of the party’s national convention.Over the past four days, speakers at the convention have included White House aides to Trump, his family members, and a few statewide elected politicians. Broadly they have argued that Biden is a leftist radical that would bring ruination to the country and Trump is the only person who can stop it.Trump delivered his speech amid heightened tensions across the country over the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a black man who was repeatedly shot in front of his children and left paralyzed by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Sunday. The shooting has sparked a wave of anti-racism and anti-police brutality protests across the country.Trump and his campaign have charged again and again that Biden is a “socialist” and liberal extremist who wants to defund police across the country and supports a Medicare for All healthcare plan championed by the Vermont senator Bernie Sanders. Both are untrue.In his speech, Trump portrayed himself as a president focused on law and order. During the protests across the country, Trump has expressed support for law enforcement using tougher tactics. He has dispatched federal law enforcement and military officials to cities experiencing protests, which has served to inflame tensions.Biden himself has pointed out that the dire picture Trump has described is actually what’s going on now, during his time in office.“The violence you’ve seen is in Donald Trump’s administration. Donald Trump’s America,” Biden said during a fundraiser Thursday afternoon.Trump, Mike Pence, and other speakers have also argued that under Trump the economy has only improved, foreign terrorists have been defeated, and the coronavirus pandemic is an afterthought. But the US defense department says Isis has not been entirely defeated; tens of millions remain unemployed; and more than 180,000 people have died from Covid-19, far more than in any other country.Trump has made some kind of appearance every night of the convention, at times blurring the lines between campaigning and governing, and raising ethics concerns. But Trump aides, including his chief of staff, have denied allegations that the president and his team violated the Hatch Act, which bars federal employees from conducting political activity while on duty.Besides Trump, the Arkansas senator Tom Cotton and Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani delivered speeches. Giuliani, the former New York mayor, used his speech to paint a portrait of an America on the verge of anarchy, and accused New York current mayor Bill De Blasio of allowing protests and crime to spiral.“Today, my city is in shock. Murders, shootings, and violent crime are increasing in percentages never heard of in the past,” Giuliani claimed. In reality, serious crime is down under de Blasio, the annual number of murders is around half the number it was under Giuliani.“These continuous riots in Democratic cities gives a good view” of a Biden administration, Giuliani claimed. He ended by saying “Mr President, make our nation safe again!”In a taped speech, senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, described Trump as his friend, and framed himself as a midwestern champion leading the defense of the Senate from Democrats.“Today’s Democratic party doesn’t want to improve life for middle America,” McConnell said in the video, going on to say “we are the firewall against Nancy Pelosi’s agenda”.Unlike most speakers this week, Trump’s housing secretary Ben Carson directly addressed Blake’s shooting, starting his remarks by saying “our hearts go out to the Blake family” before launching into a full throated defense of Trump on the African American community.“Before the pandemic African American unemployment was at an all time low,” Carson said, in a somewhat misleading statement. “At this point in time President Trump is the man with the courage, the vision, and the ability to keep it shining brightly.”The RNC has notably lacked some key party figures and the presence of the last Republican president, George W Bush. Meanwhile, Democrats’ convention included speeches by former Republican elected officials who have emerged as outspoken critics of the president.On Thursday morning, aides to the previous two Republican nominees for president, the late John McCain and the Utah senator Mitt Romney, released statements endorsing Biden. The Biden campaign hopes that support will motivate moderates and Republicans to support the centrist Democrat.Earlier on Thursday, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, Kamala Harris, delivered a scathing rebuke of the Trump administration’s handling of the pandemic.“The Republican convention is designed for one purpose: to soothe Donald Trump’s ego, to make him feel good,” Harris said. “But here’s the thing: he’s the president of the United States, and it’s not supposed to be about him. It’s supposed to be about the health and the safety and the wellbeing of the American people.” More

  • in

    Kamala Harris delivers scorching rebuke of Trump's Covid response ahead of his RNC speech – live

    Democrat says: ‘All we needed was a competent president’
    Hurricane Laura: at least four killed including 14-year-old girl
    Trump to visit hurricane-damaged zone this weekend
    Pence claims US would be unsafe under Biden in dark speech
    Kenosha police officer who shot Jacob Blake named
    1,187 new coronavirus deaths and 44,877 new cases reported yesterday
    Sign up for our First Thing newsletter

    LIVE
    Updated More