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    Mike Pence accuses Biden of 'attacking America' in Republican convention speech – live

    Vice-president, second lady, and Kellyanne Conway speak
    Protests continue over police shooting of Jacob Blake
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    RNC 2020 live: Mike Pence to headline third night of convention amid growing unrest in Kenosha

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    11.19pm EDT23:19
    Third night of the Republican convention concludes

    11.13pm EDT23:13
    Pence: ‘We will make America great again, again’

    11.01pm EDT23:01
    Pence: ‘The violence must stop … we will have law and order’

    10.44pm EDT22:44
    Pence formally accepts vice presidential nomination

    10.39pm EDT22:39
    Pence accuses Biden of ‘attacking America’ during convention

    10.35pm EDT22:35
    Pence delivers convention speech

    9.16pm EDT21:16
    Second lady Karen Pence thanks military spouses

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    11.23pm EDT23:23

    Lara Trump earlier misquoted Abraham Lincoln:
    “America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter & lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves,” Trump said.

    PolitiFact
    (@PolitiFact)
    That nice Lincoln quote Lara Trump just said? Lincoln didn’t say it. https://t.co/6BrYGvSypy #RNC2020

    August 27, 2020

    From PolitiFact:

    On Jan. 27, 1838, Lincoln spoke before the Young Men’s Lyceum of Springfield, Illinois, about “the perpetuation of our political institutions.” During that address, he said: “At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.”
    Michael Burlingame, a chair in Lincoln studies at the University of Illinois Springfield, told us Lincoln “was denouncing mob violence which would lead to chaos, provoking the public to demand law and order, which would be provided by an ambitious leader who would rule tyrannically.”

    – MS

    11.19pm EDT23:19

    Third night of the Republican convention concludes

    With Vice President Mike Pence’s speech wrapped up, the third night of the Republican convention has concluded.
    The blog will have more reactions and analysis to come, so stay tuned.

    11.16pm EDT23:16

    Mike Pence said Trump suspended “tall travel from China”. He did not – he restricted travel from China. After the restrictions went into place, nearly 40,000 Americans and other exempted travelers made their way to the US from China.
    Also, the travel restrictions limiting trips from China and Europe were enacted after the virus was already circulating within the US. Public health experts told me they were an ineffective measure against the virus.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.16pm EDT

    11.15pm EDT23:15

    At the end of his speech, Vice President Mike Pence was joined onstage by the president and the first lady, as well as his wife, second lady Karen Pence.

    Steve Herman
    (@W7VOA)
    #RNC2020 election ticket at @FortMcHenryNPS. pic.twitter.com/VryoRVrbKM

    August 27, 2020

    11.13pm EDT23:13

    Pence: ‘We will make America great again, again’

    Vice President Mike Pence closed his convention speech by promising Trump would “make America great again, again.”
    “We will re-elect our president and principled Republican leaders across this land,” Pence said. “And with President Donald Trump in the White House for four more years, and God’s help, we will make America great again, again.”
    The Trump campaign previously focused on the slogan “Keep America Great,” but that phrase has been de-emphasized since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

    11.09pm EDT23:09

    Mike Pence honored Dave Patrick Underwood, a federal officer who was shot during the “riots in Oakland California”. What Pence’s vague phrasing omits: An air force sergeant with links to the far-right “boogaloo” movement, was charged with killing Underwood.
    Pence’s mention of Underwood came with a tirade against rioters and looters amid protests against police brutality, misleadingly implying that largely peaceful demonstrators in Oakland (where – not-so-coincidentally, Kamala Harris was born) were somehow involved.
    Here’s more about the Underwood case, from my colleague Lois Beckett:
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.11pm EDT

    11.09pm EDT23:09

    Echoing the dark theme of the Republican convention, Vice President Mike Pence painted a dire picture of the alleged dangers of electing Joe Biden.
    “President Trump set our nation on a path to freedom and opportunity from the very first day of this administration,” Pence said. “But Joe Biden would set America on a path of socialism and decline.”
    Biden does not identify as a socialist, and under the current Trump administration, the US unemployment rate stands at 10.2%.

    11.03pm EDT23:03

    Sounding like a Trump campaign ad, Vice-President Mike Pence said, “The hard truth is you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America.”
    Pence continued, “Under President Trump, we will stand with those who stand on the thin blue line, and we’re not going to defund the police – not now, not ever.”
    Despite the claims of many convention speakers this week, Biden does not support defunding the police and has repeatedly said so.

    Updated
    at 11.08pm EDT

    11.01pm EDT23:01

    Pence: ‘The violence must stop … we will have law and order’

    Mike Pence repeated Trump’s message of “law and order”, as protests continue in Kenosha over the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
    “The violence must stop, whether in Minneapolis, Portland or Kenosha,” Pence said. “We will have law and order on the streets of this country for every American of every race and creed and color.”
    The vice-president has not yet mentioned the name of Blake, an African American father of six who was repeatedly shot in the back by Kenosha police officers.

    Updated
    at 11.09pm EDT

    10.53pm EDT22:53

    Like other convention speakers, Vice-President Mike Pence tried to direct focus to the pre-pandemic economy.
    “In our first three years, we built the greatest economy in the world,” Pence said. “We made America great again. And then the coronavirus struck from China.”
    The US unemployment rate is currently at 10.2%, and tens of millions of Americans remain jobless.
    Pence also took issue with Joe Biden’s comment last week that “no miracle is coming” to save the US from the pandemic.
    “What Joe doesn’t seem to understand is that America is a nation of miracles and we’re on track to have the world’s first safe, effective coronavirus vaccine by the end of this year.”

    Updated
    at 10.55pm EDT

    10.52pm EDT22:52

    As Mike Pence was speaking at the RNC, Joe Biden countered with this:

    Joe Biden
    (@JoeBiden)
    This moment demands moral leadership. And these players answered by standing up, speaking out, and using their platform for good.Now is not the time for silence. https://t.co/hF3dIb7Hde

    August 27, 2020

    The Milwaukee Bucks boycotted their game today as a protest against the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Milwaukee’s baseball team, the Brewers, have also boycotted their upcoming game.
    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 10.55pm EDT

    10.47pm EDT22:47

    In his convention speech, Mike Pence reflected on Trump’s leadership style since taking office.
    “He does things his own way, on his own terms. Not much gets past him and when he has an opinion, he’s liable to share it,” Pence said.
    “He’s certainly kept things interesting,” Pence added. “But more importantly, President Donald Trump has kept his word to the American people.”
    According to Politifact, Trump has actually broken about half of the promises he has made to the American people.

    Updated
    at 11.00pm EDT

    10.47pm EDT22:47

    Madison Cawthorn, the 25-year-old congressional candidate in North Carolina said, “James Madison was just 25 years old when he signed the Declaration of Independence.”
    James Madison did not sign the Declaration of Independence, though he was 25 when other people signed it.
    – Maanvi Singh

    10.44pm EDT22:44

    Pence formally accepts vice presidential nomination

    Four years after first doing so, Mike Pence once again formally accepted the Republican vice-presidential nomination.
    “With gratitude for the confidence President Donald Trump has placed in me, the support of our Republican party, and the grace of God, I humbly accept your nomination to run and serve as vice-president of the United States,” Pence said.

    Updated
    at 11.01pm EDT

    10.41pm EDT22:41

    In his convention speech, Vice-President Mike Pence provided an update on the response to Hurricane Laura and offered a message of support to those affected by the storm.
    “Stay safe, and know that we’ll be with you every step of the way,” Pence said.

    Updated
    at 11.01pm EDT

    10.39pm EDT22:39

    Pence accuses Biden of ‘attacking America’ during convention

    Reflecting on the setting of his speech, Vice-President Mike Pence began his speech by talking about the early American heroes who defended the country’s values.
    “But they were hardly ever mentioned at last week’s Democratic national convention,” Pence said.
    “Democrats spent four days attacking America. Joe Biden said we were living through a ‘season of American darkness.’
    “But as President Trump said, ‘where Joe Biden sees American darkness, we see American greatness.’”
    That messaged seemed odd considering the country is currently losing about 1,000 people a day to coronavirus.

    Updated
    at 11.02pm EDT

    10.37pm EDT22:37

    Ric Grenell, the former US ambassador to Germany and the former acting director of national intelligence, said he saw how Trump “charmed the chancellor of Germany”.
    Angela Merkel, the chancellor of Germany, has expressed that she is decidedly not charmed by how Donald Trump runs the country. Speaking about the global response to coronavirus pandemic in July, Merkel had this thinly veiled rebuke: “As we are experiencing first-hand, you cannot fight the pandemic with lies and disinformation any more than you can fight it with hate or incitement to hatred.”
    Speaking at a Harvard graduation ceremony in 2019 she said: “More than ever our actions have to be multilateral rather than unilateral … Don’t disguise lies as truth, and truth as lies … Tear down walls of ignorance and narrow-mindedness,” mounting an argument against Trump’s “America First” approach to foreign policy.
    She did not visit the White House during a visit to the country. And then there’s this:

    russchoma
    (@russchoma)
    Actual picture of Trump “charming” Angela Merkel pic.twitter.com/Hl6hf22CBe

    August 27, 2020

    – Maanvi Singh

    Updated
    at 11.03pm EDT More

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    Ex-White House lawyer endured 'some crazy shit' from Trump, book reveals

    Former White House counsel Don McGahn endured screaming matches with Donald Trump, badgering phone calls at home on his birthday and the president saying “some crazy shit” in order to advance the project closest to McGahn’s heart: packing the federal judiciary with activist conservative judges.McGahn’s lead role in developing the roster of judges used by Trump to remake the federal judiciary – Trump has elevated 201 judges and counting, including two supreme court justices – has long been known.But a new book by the New York Time reporter Michael Schmidt reveals for the first time the trials that McGahn, a libertarian who saw extreme judges as the best way to limit the scope of government, underwent to take advantage of the “once-in-a-never-again” opportunity he had in the chaotic early days of the Trump White House.The book, Donald Trump v The United States: Inside the Struggle to Stop a President, a copy of which was obtained by the Guardian, hits bookstores next week.In the book Schmidt, who originally broke the news that McGahn had cooperated extensively with special counsel Robert Mueller in the investigation of the Trump campaign’s Russia ties, deepens the picture of that cooperation. “McGahn had turned into the Mueller team’s personal Forrest Gump,” Schmidt writes, “the guy with the front-row seat to all the awful history of the Trump administration he had never wanted to witness.”Schmidt’s book focuses on the roles McGahn and former FBI director James Comey played in attempting to contain a president both men recognized as mercurial and potentially threatening to the country.Comey was fired by Trump in May 2017, leading to the appointment of Mueller, one of many dramatic developments in Trump’s first term that Schmidt was on the vanguard of reporting at the time. Schmidt recounts that episode and many others with new details, to dramatic effect, in the book.McGahn left the White House in October 2018, after the successful confirmation of the man McGahn personally picked as Trump’s second supreme court justice, Brett Kavanaugh.While not seeming to share Comey’s anguished concern for the independence of the judiciary and the balance of powers under Trump, McGahn – a campaign law expert – had plenty of personal frustration with Trump, whom he referred to as “Kong” or “King Kong” or “fucking Kong”, after the hostile movie gorilla, Schmidt reports.The Mueller report previously documented McGahn’s run-ins with his boss. One of the key descriptions of potential obstruction of justice by Trump in the report describes Trump calling McGahn at home and instructing McGahn to put in motion Mueller’s firing, an instruction McGahn ignored apart from relaying it to his personal lawyer.But Schmidt reveals the previously unknown extent to which McGahn cooperated with Mueller, turning over “nearly a thousand pages of handwritten White House notes” to the special counsel. The cooperation was so fruitful, Schmidt writes, that Mueller’s team tried to “run” McGahn, or recruit him to gather information in real time about what was happening inside the White House. No such arrangement was explicitly made.Much of the book expands on major scoops by Schmidt during the special counsel’s investigation, including the revelations that then attorney general Jeff Sessions was looking for dirt on Comey; that Trump had moved to fire Mueller; and scenes such as Trump’s explosion upon learning that deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein had appointed Mueller as special counsel: “It’s your fucking fault!” Trump thundered at Sessions.On multiple occasions, Schmidt writes, McGahn prepared his resignation as White House counsel, whose role is to give the president legal advice as it relates to the office of the presidency.McGahn prepared a one-line resignation letter after the White House came under pressure to withdraw Trump’s first nomination to the US supreme court, Neil Gorsuch, whom McGahn also had personally picked, according to the book.“Nominating judges was why he had taken the job,” Schmidt writes. “He was told this was going to be his turf, entirely.”Later, after Trump called him at home on his birthday – twice – and told him to tell Rosenstein to fire Mueller, McGahn went so far as to clean out his office at the White House and prepare another letter.“I have a real fucking problem,” McGahn told his personal lawyer about Trump, according to Schmidt. “I don’t want to speak out of school, but he’s saying some crazy shit.”But the resignation letter was never sent. The greater project, for McGahn, of appointing judges, as well as slashing government regulations, held precedence.Schmidt writes: “McGahn knew that he would never have this power again.” More

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    Trump’s presidential powers on full display at day two of RNC – video report

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    2:10

    Ethical questions were raised during day two of the Republican national convention, as Donald Trump was accused of misusing trappings of his office for political purposes and using the White House as a prop. 
    Pardoning convicts, naturalisation ceremonies and speeches from the White House were just a few of the items on the agenda that caused concern. 
    Culture wars and a pitch to women: key takeaways from night two of the RNC

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    Melania Trump addresses Covid death toll, calls for unity amid racial tensions in RNC speech – video

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    2:27

    US first lady Melania Trump bucked the attacking trend of the 2020 Republican national convention speeches, addressing the country’s large coronavirus death toll and calling for unity amid growing racial tension. The speech shifted the tone on an evening spent criticising the policies of Democratic rivals including Joe Biden. Melania Trump’s speech was the third of the evening from the president’s family, following addresses from daughter Tiffany and son Eric
    Culture wars and a pitch to women: key takeaways from night two of the RNC
    Melania Trump offers condolences to families of Covid-19 victims in RNC speech

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    Republican national convention 2020

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