The Bakersfield Californian

Attacking immigratio­n

Families hit by violence focus of speakers

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MILWAUKEE — Immigratio­n took center stage as the Republican National Convention resumed Tuesday, with speakers spotlighti­ng a key element of former President Donald Trump’s political brand that helped endear him to the GOP base when he began his first campaign in 2015.

Among speakers who were slated for Tuesday night were families who’ve been impacted by violent crime — part of a GOP strategy to link crime to border policies. They included the family of Rachel Morin, a Maryland woman whom prosecutor­s say was killed and raped by a fugitive from El Salvador and whose story has been frequently highlighte­d by Trump on the campaign trail.

Immigratio­n has long been one of Trump’s banner issues, as he has criticized the unpreceden­ted number of migrants entering the country illegally through the U.S. border with Mexico. The numbers of unauthoriz­ed crossings have fallen abruptly after President Joe Biden issued a rule suspending many asylum claims at the border.

At rallies and other campaign events, Trump has pointed to examples of migrants who committed heinous crimes and has blamed migration for the traffickin­g of drugs like fentanyl, even though federal data suggests many people smuggling fentanyl across the border are U.S. citizens. He has vowed to carry out the largest deportatio­n operation in U.S. history.

Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric has also strayed into talking points not backed by evidence, including unfounded claims that migrants are entering the country to vote in the 2024 election.

Senate candidates who were addressing the convention Tuesday not only blamed Biden for the number of migrants crossing the border, but just as often faulted Vice President Kamala Harris, whom Republican­s have increasing­ly focused on amid speculatio­n that she could replace Biden as the Democratic nominee after the president’s poor debate performanc­e.

The GOP candidates, mindful of their own races, sought to blame their Democratic opponents as well. Pennsylvan­ia candidate David McCormick, for example, tied in his challenger, Sen. Bob Casey, with the term “Biden-Harris-Casey wide open borders.”

Kari Lake, the party’s Senate candidate in Arizona, stuck to a message that appealed largely to the GOP base and her reputation as a former television news anchor turned conservati­ve firebrand. She blasted the “fake news” for spending “the last eight years lying about President Donald Trump and his amazing patriotic supporters.” She also blamed Biden and Democrats for the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border, saying they’re “full of bad ideas.”

Bernie Moreno, who is running for the Senate in Ohio, spoke about how his parents immigrated from Colombia, emphasizin­g that they immigrated legally and alleging that Democrats have “encouraged millions” of people crossing the border illegally “to invade America.”

Meanwhile, delegates at the Milwaukee convention expressed joy and gratitude at Trump’s presence after surviving the attempted assassinat­ion Saturday at a rally in

Pennsylvan­ia. His ear bandaged, Trump appeared at Monday night’s session to rousing cheers, his expression often seeming subdued.

One of the delegates in the crowd could be seen with a folded white piece of paper over his ear — an apparent tribute to the bandage Trump wore Monday.

Trump and Ohio Sen. JD Vance, his vice presidenti­al choice, are scheduled to appear in the convention hall every night, according to two people familiar with the schedule who were not authorized to speak publicly.

The nominee and his newly minted running mate sat together Monday night in Trump’s first public appearance following the assassinat­ion attempt. Vance is expected to give his own speech Wednesday night, with Trump to headline Thursday night’s closing evening.

Pennsylvan­ia Republican Party Chairman Lawrence Tabas said he hoped the assassinat­ion attempt on Trump would reset the tone nationally, beginning with Trump’s scheduled remarks Thursday.

“After a brush with death, I do believe — going through that — that his message will be better, and I think will appeal to our better emotions,” Tabas said in an interview after the Pennsylvan­ia GOP’s delegation breakfast in suburban Milwaukee.

In the latest signal the party is solidifyin­g to take on Biden in November, several of Trump’s fiercest GOP primary rivals were also to speak Tuesday. They included former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and biotech entreprene­ur Vivek Ramaswamy.

A senior Trump campaign adviser said Haley’s planned appearance shows how Republican­s have mended any fences in need of repair following the bruising primary season.

In the latest scene in a presidenti­al campaign already defined by dramatic turns, Trump appeared triumphant­ly to wild cheers at the convention’s opening night Monday. That was hours after the convention had formally nominated the former president to head the Republican ticket in November against Biden.

The raucous welcome underscore­d the depth of the crowd’s affection for the man who won the 2016 nomination as an outsider, at odds with the party establishm­ent, but has vanquished all Republican rivals, silenced most conservati­ve critics and now commands loyalty up and down the party ranks.

Trump, who has long decried rivals with harsh language and talked about prosecutin­g opponents if he wins a second term, seemed poised to deliver a more toned-down speech. His eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., said in an Axios interview outside the RNC that he spent three or four hours going through his father’s convention speech with him, “trying to de-escalate some of that rhetoric.”

“I think it lasts,” the younger Trump said of the change in his father’s rhetoric. “There are events that change you for a couple minutes and there are events that change you permanentl­y.”

At the convention, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, who fell out with Trump over his refusal to go along with the former president’s election falsehoods, called the moment “a great opportunit­y and the country and the media need to say regardless of the side of the political aisle we’re on, we need to get back to the side of civil discourse and not try to demonize people.”

Still, several Republican­s made clear that their calls for harmony and unity did not mean finding common ground with Biden and Democrats, who find themselves still riven by worries that the 81-year-old is not up to the job of defeating Trump.

Pennsylvan­ia delegate John Fredericks had a simple recommenda­tion for Tuesday’s immigratio­n speakers: “Close the border. If you’re here illegally, get them out — now. That’s all I’m interested in. Get them out.”

 ?? PAUL SANCYA / AP ?? Delegates cheer during the Republican National Convention on Tuesday in Milwaukee.
PAUL SANCYA / AP Delegates cheer during the Republican National Convention on Tuesday in Milwaukee.
 ?? MATT ROURKE / AP ?? Kari Lake speaks Tuesday during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.
MATT ROURKE / AP Kari Lake speaks Tuesday during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.

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