Friday, August 28, 2020

Abomination at the White House -- Trump's Garish Acceptance Speech



In accepting the Republican nomination, Trump turned his back on the crowd and surveyed the executive mansion, stretching out his arms in a gesture that exemplified his vision of ultimate, unaccountable presidential power. He boasted …

The fact is, I’m here — what’s the name of that building?” he said, pointing to the White House. “The fact is, we’re here and they’re not.”

Donald Trump, Acceptance Speech, White House

With all the ostentatious pomp and reality show pageantry fit for a man-who-would-be king, Trump gave his acceptance speech from the south lawn of the White House on August 27, 2020. Featuring an over-elaborated red carpet entry by the president and the first lady, the event was a gaudy spectacle fit for his adoring Trump minions. And, oh yes, the finale featured a dazzling fireworks show with the Washington Monument as a theatrical backdrop.

The large screens with their "Trump/Pence" logo were a jarring sight below the Truman Balcony and on the grounds of a national icon financed by all taxpayers.

The set-up was a defiant metaphor for Trump's willingness to crush the traditions of the presidency, to put his own immediate gain over the dignity of the office and to troll his enemies while he was at it.”

(Stephen Collinson “Trump – Dark and Defiant As Ever.” kezi.com. CNN. August 28, 2020.)



Trump shredded norms and laws like the Hatch Act that have restrained previous presidents from using public property as a political prop, and delivered his speech from the White House. The result was gauche images of “TRUMP/PENCE” signs on property that isn’t supposed to belong to any political party.

Note – The Hatch Act is a 1939 law that restricts federal employees' engagement in specific partisan political activities, with the aim of preventing members of the executive branch from interfering in elections. These prohibited activities include running for office, hosting fundraisers, making campaign speeches or distributing campaign materials.

Walter Shaub, former director of the United States Office of Government Ethics, described Trump’s decision to have the RNC at the White House as an “abomination” that “may be the most visible misuse of official position for private gain in America’s history.”

Julian Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University, said while it can be difficult for a president to totally separate himself from politics, using the White House as a "prop" at a party convention is unprecedented in recent times. Zelizer told ABC News …

"There still is a boundary between politics and governing, and the Oval Office and White House are a public site meant for the country that isn't meant to be a political backdrop. To just use it as the major site for a convention speech seems like a lot with President Trump – you just take all the guardrails down."

The massive gathering on the White House lawn comes after Trump canceled convention plans in Charlotte, North Carolina, complaining that he would not be able to hold a large celebration without masks or social distancing.

Trump's crowd of 2,000 people on the South Lawn, few wearing masks and sitting close together, was an extraordinary scene during a pandemic that has brought America to its knees, but it exemplified Trump's willingness to spin a false alternative reality for political gain.

Amazingly, he (Trump) accused Biden of ignoring science -- and falsely said that his opponent wanted to shut down the whole country -- after flouting his own public health experts in a denial-laden and disastrous response to the pandemic.”

(Stephen Collinson “Trump – Dark and Defiant As Ever.” kezi.com. CNN. August 28, 2020.)

In a statement sent to Vox, Jordan Libowitz, communications director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), noted that “history is littered with totalitarians who used their government as political props.”

With Trump’s show in front of the White House -- the climax of a three-and-a-half year crescendo of attacking the foundations of our democracy -- we saw something we’ve never seen before. And it’s terrifying.”

(Aaron Rupar. “Trump’s RNC speech was a mess. But the optics of it were powerful.” Vox. August 28, 2020.)

Former White House ethics chief Walter Shaub, who served for six months under Trump and six under President Barack Obama, said the South Lawn speech wasn’t just an ethical lapse but “the breach of a sacred trust.” Shaub reported …

This abomination may be the most visible misuse of official position for private gain in America’s history. It is an abuse of the power entrusted to this man, the breach of a sacred trust. It is the civic equivalent of a mortal sin – maybe a religious one too. And it is a harbinger.”

(Ed Mazza. “‘Abomination’: Critics Rip Trump For ‘Desecrating’ White House With RNC Speech.” Huffington Post. August 28, 2020.)

Trump's acceptance speech was only one of several purely political events done on government property lately. Earlier in the week, Trump turned a naturalization ceremony at the White House into a televised spectacle during the RNC. And on Thursday, for Trump’s speech, the White House was festooned with campaign signs and logos.

What's the name of that building?” It is evident Trump would like to put his official Trump Organization trademark on the White House. The question remains: Can America endure another four years of Trump's attacks on democracy? This speech is a “harbinder” of more abuse of power says Walter Shaub. God help us to stop this abuse in November.



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