Connect with us

Travel

Trump says he will travel to Republican National Convention today as planned

Published

on

Trump says he will travel to Republican National Convention today as planned

The shooting that left former president Donald Trump injured on Saturday reshaped the presidential race and injected an element of uncertainty into plans for this week’s Republican National Convention as both parties recalibrated to reflect the stunned and somber mood of the nation.

But the extent to which the tenor and tone of the convention program will change will be determined by the former president, who has been intensively involved in planning the four-day event in Milwaukee. Expressing his eagerness to address supporters, he posted on Truth Social on Sunday morning that he and his movement would “remain resilient in our Faith and Defiant in the face of Wickedness.”

Trump announced Sunday afternoon on Truth Social that he was planning to head to Milwaukee within hours instead of delaying his trip by two days. The former president said he had “decided that I cannot allow a ‘shooter,’ or potential assassin, to force [a] change to scheduling, or anything else.”

A person who spoke to Trump in the last 12 hours said he was almost “spiritual” about the situation “and that’s totally not normal for him.” Like other people interviewed for this story, this person spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential conversations and planning.

“He thinks he was handed a gift from God. He can’t believe it,” the person said. Trump’s aides are instructing others that they should emphasize “unity” at the convention. The focus of the four-day event is expected to become more about his “courage and his resilience,” a person close to him said. The convention’s planners “want speakers to dial it down, not dial it up,” the person said, referring to the rhetoric used in speeches.

In a memo to staff in the early hours of Sunday, top Trump advisers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles said that the convention “will continue as planned” as party delegates prepare to “nominate our President to be the brave and fearless nominee of our party.”

LaCivita and Wiles said they had enhanced the security presence at Trump’s campaign offices in D.C. and West Palm Beach, Fla., and encouraged aides to stay away from the offices as they assessed the security risks. Several people with knowledge of convention planning said additional security measures were put in place to ensure that events, including those outside the hardened security perimeter, would be safe to attend. But those people said that they expected the program to go forward largely as planned.

In an attempt to bridge the internal divisions within the GOP, Nikki Haley — the former South Carolina governor who ran for the Republican nomination against Trump — will speak at the convention, according to two sources familiar with the planning. Haley did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

One major challenge for aides to both Trump and President Biden in the days ahead will be grappling with the anger and partisan vitriol that burst forth immediately after the shooting. Many supporters of Trump, both rank-and-file voters and elected officials, quickly took to social media to argue that the rhetoric of Biden and his supporters — casting Trump as a threat to democracy — led to Saturday’s events.

LaCivita and Wiles sought to cool the temperature in their overnight memo, asking aides not to comment publicly on the shooting. “We condemn all forms of violence and will not tolerate dangerous rhetoric on social media.”

LaCivita initially posted a more pointed commentary on X on Saturday night — suggesting the attack was tied to decisions by Trump’s adversaries. “[W]ell of course they tried to keep him off the ballot, they tried to put him in jail and now you see this,” LaCivita wrote. He later deleted the post.

Many Trump allies, including Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), who is under consideration to be Trump’s running mate, cast blame for the shooting on Trump’s political opponents — with Vance arguing that it was not “just some isolated incident.”

In his televised statement Saturday after the shooting, Biden called Saturday’s violence “sick” and asked Americans to “unite as one nation to condemn it.”

Democrats had planned a full week of counterprogramming with daily news conferences to push their message about Biden’s economic successes, the Republican Party’s direction on abortion and Trump’s statements about what he would do if he is elected again.

But the Biden campaign paused all outbound communications on Saturday night and aides said they were working to pull their television ads down as quickly as possible — injecting uncertainty into how the campaign will respond to convention speeches and activities this week.

Trump signaled his defiance in the immediate moments after the shooting in Butler, Pa., pumping his fist and mouthing the word “fight” several times as his Secret Service detail ushered him offstage.

In his Truth Social post Sunday, Trump modulated that tone — writing that “it is more important than ever that we stand United, and show our True Character as Americans, remaining Strong and Determined, and not allowing Evil to Win.”

Continue Reading