By Isaac Schorr
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
The second night of the Republican National Convention
(RNC) seemed destined for disaster. Before it had even started, there were
fires to put out. On Tuesday afternoon, scheduled speaker Mary Ann Mendoza,
whose son was killed in a car accident with a drunk illegal immigrant,
retweeted a thread promoting the anti-Semitic “Protocols of the Elders of Zion”
conspiracy theory. Unfortunately, this was not the first instance of Mendoza
promoting such drivel. Thankfully, the RNC pulled Mendoza from its slate.
Another speaker, Planned Parenthood clinic director turned pro-life activist
Abby Johnson, had controversial comments in which she claimed police would be
“smart” to be “more careful” around her biracial “brown son” than her white
children reposted by Vice News. Johnson’s address went ahead as planned.
To its credit, though, the RNC — with a little help from
the folks over at CNN — more than salvaged the evening. Anticipating that
commentators would end the pre-convention coverage with ominous sign-offs —
Jake Tapper gravely warned of “norm erosion” — the RNC began with a cheery
message and full-throated endorsement from the Vice President of the Navajo
Nation. That was followed by the touching story of Jon Ponder, a felon who
found Christ and reformed himself, and the FBI agent who arrested him. It
culminated with President Trump giving Ponder a pardon, live on air. Anderson
Cooper cut in afterwards looking troubled, repeatedly calling what had just
transpired “unprecedented.” Van Jones concurred and lamented that the pardon
was being used for political purposes.
But the optimism conveyed by most of the speakers
outshined the concerns of the pundits. A smile was glued onto Tiffany Trump,
the president’s younger daughter, while she gave a speech in which she
declared: “The energy of change and opportunity is with us. God has blessed us
with unstoppable spirit. His spirit, the American spirit. My dad has proven to
be driven by that spirit. He has demonstrated his faith in his uncompromising
heart and actions. My father has made me believe that America can truly be great
again.”
Vice President Pence appeared in a video that featured a
young boy with muscular dystrophy who has benefited from the “right-to-try”
bill that passed in 2019, an autoworker whose job was saved by Trump’s
negotiations with General Motors, and a woman whose small business was kept
afloat by the Paycheck Protection Program. Pence, sans suit jacket, asked them
all leading questions about how the Trump administration’s agenda has helped
them, nodding knowingly and sympathetically as they answered.
Daniel Cameron, Kentucky’s Republican attorney general
and the first black man to hold the position, gave a polished speech and, like
Senator Tim Scott, invoked his ancestors who had been enslaved: pointing to
himself as evidence of how far the country had come. Aside: We likely have not
heard the last of Cameron, who won his race by 15 points and who will probably
be the Republican favorite to run against incumbent Democratic governor Andy
Beshear when Beshear’s term expires.
The cherry on top was the naturalization ceremony. No
tut-tutting over norm-breaking was going to overshadow the smiles on the newly
minted Americans’ faces, which were priceless. The diverse group of immigrants
from India, Ghana, Lebanon, Sudan, and Bolivia were obviously overjoyed at
becoming Americans in the presence of the president of the United States, and I
suspect that most of those watching at home felt a similar elation.
Tapper, Anderson, and Jones are right, to a degree. That
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke at the convention was atypical, but he
gave a boilerplate speech and that broken custom does not strike me as one
especially close to American hearts — certainly not close enough for Tapper’s
dramatic declaration at the end of the speech about “another norm” being
“destroyed” to resonate with the public. And yes, Trump pardoned Ponder and
presided over the naturalization ceremony to benefit his reelection campaign.
But I’d be willing to bet that to the average viewer, the hand-wringing at CNN
over it looked petty and small compared to the grandeur of the events
themselves. Politicians pull off political stunts — it’s just what they do —
and for my part I was just happy to watch a couple of uplifting moments play
out.
Norms are an important facet of our political system, and
few people have as little regard for them as President Trump; It’s worth
criticizing him for that. But by treating a speech from a political ally, a
naturalization ceremony, and a well-deserved presidential pardon as downright
sinister, CNN — acting as a de facto arm of the Democratic National Committee —
played right into the RNC’s surprisingly deft hands on Tuesday.
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