US Republicans make it official with Trump
July 20, 2016Despite some delegates' voicing dislike for Donald Trump, Republicans were all but certain to choose him to lead the party's charge against the Democrat Hillary Clinton over the next 110 days until the November election. It ended an insurrection by Trump's opponents within the party, who had staged a failed attempt to force a vote opposing his candidacy on Monday.
"He is a warrior and a winner," said Senator Jeff Sessions, who represents the Southern state of Alabama in the upper chamber of the US's bicameral legislature. "He loves his country and is determined to see it be a winner again." Sessions called Trump, who had most recently worked as a reality show host, "the singular leader who can get this country back on track."
Trump trails former Secretary of State Clinton in many opinion polls after he inflicted nearly as much damage on himself as on his dozen-plus Republican opponents - many of whom boast more impressive electoral resumes than he does - in the scorched-earth 2016 primary campaign.
Still, the lead of the former first lady and New York senator has slipped to seven points, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released late Tuesday.
Protests and plagiarism?
Accusations of plagiarism continue to dog Melania Trump. Her endorsement of her husband on Monday appeared to repeat word-for-word statements made by current first lady Michelle Obama when her husband, Barack, awaited the Democratic nomination at the party's 2008 convention.
As critics accused Trump of lifting passages from Obama's speech, a campaign official suggested that the similarity had resulted from an error by the potential first lady's speechwriters. If that proved the case, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said, he would probably fire the writer.
Late Tuesday outside the Quicken Loans Arena, demonstrators appeared outnumbered by police and members of the media. Police on bike and on foot formed lines to keep pockets of competing protesters separated.
Officers on bicycles formed a line between a right-wing religious group and left-leaning protesters carrying a sign that read "America Was Never Great" - a reference to Trump's repeated pledge to "make America great again." In order to do so, Trump has endorsed a temporary ban on immigration from primarily Islamic countries and the building of a wall on the US's border with Mexico.
In an interview released early Wednesday, the news agency Reuters reported that German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Trump dealt in a "politics of fear and isolation."
mkg/jm (Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)