Trump returns to trail in Miami as Biden fights off revolt
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Republican and former US president Donald Trump attends a campaign rally at his golf resort in Florida on July 9.
PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON – Donald Trump is resurfacing on the campaign trail after lying low for days while a firestorm enveloped his rival President Joe Biden, who is fending off calls from within his own party to step aside for a younger Democratic nominee.
Just a few weeks ago, this was projected to be one of the worst periods of the campaign for Trump.
He had been scheduled to face sentencing by a New York judge on July 11 for his conviction in a hush-money case.
But a favourable US Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity delayed that court reckoning
Instead, it is Mr Biden who continues to face an onslaught of negative coverage stemming from stumbles during the June 27 presidential debate
This week promises to be a productive one for Trump.
In addition to holding rallies in front of friendly crowds at his Miami golf club on July 9 and rural Pennsylvania on July 7, he is readying a rollout of his vice-presidential choice, introducing a party platform that embodies his world view and preparing for the Republican National Convention next week.
On July 9 (July 10 in Singapore), Trump will appear with Florida Senator Marco Rubio, one of the top contenders to be his running mate at a rally at the Trump National Doral Miami, according to a person familiar with the event.
Other vice-presidential possibilities include Senator J.D. Vance of Ohio and North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum.
Trump has drawn out the vice-presidential selection process
In an interview with host Sean Hannity on Fox News on the night of July 9, the former president said he had yet to make a decision, but plans to make an announcement in the coming week.
Trump added that his running mate would be “a person that can do a fantastic job as president” as well as “somebody that helps you get elected, and there’s nothing wrong with that”.
The campaign is planning to use the yet-to-be-named vice-presidential candidate to court donors with two fund-raisers planned next week during the convention, according to invitations obtained by Bloomberg News.
Palantir Technologies’ Jacob Helberg is also among the co-hosts for a fund-raiser in Milwaukee next week sponsored by Trump’s Jewish Leadership Coalition.
Announcing key convention details has given Trump’s team further leeway to control the narrative.
The campaign and Republican National Committee (RNC) have signalled key themes for the convention: tax cuts, crime prevention and ending overseas wars, according to a schedule released on July 9.
The campaign is expected to pick politicians, business leaders and advocates to speak on those topics, but have not made those names public.
The RNC also released the party platform on July 9, a document that calls to address the migrant border crisis, bolster domestic energy production as well as cut taxes.
The party also seeks the repeal of Mr Biden’s economic, energy and immigration policies.
Trump extensively wrote and edited the platform, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal proceedings. It is the latest sign of the former president’s hold on his party.
The document was significantly shorter and less specific than previous versions, which allows Trump to keep an arm’s length from some policies that are less popular with voters, including restrictions on abortion and other reproductive health care.
“I think there’s a lot to be said about a document that is user-friendly, that is easy to understand,” said Georgia’s RNC chairman Josh McKoon, who is serving on the committee.
Trump’s control over the platform comes as he is distancing himself from the Project 2025 agenda, a sweeping policy plan crafted by several of his closest White House advisers, that has come under scrutiny for proposals to shutter some federal agencies, remove thousands of civil servants and bring in officials deemed more loyal to Trump.
International Effects
Trump’s orbit has also paid close attention in recent days to elections in Britain and France, believing that the dissatisfaction with inflation and immigration abroad is a signal that Trump’s message will resonate with voters in November, several people say.
Dr Christopher Wlezien, a political economist who studies political campaigns across the world, said incumbency is usually an advantage – but that global dissatisfaction with the economy could provide an anti-incumbent wave like the one that swept through much of the world in 2016.
“If the world is moving in parallel, you expect those other elections to be a leading indicator” for the US, he said. BLOOMBERG


