President Trump Prepares for Alternate Democrat Candidate
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President Donald Trump delivered a powerful speech on the final night of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, unifying the GOP. However, prominent Democrat leaders (former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, President Barack Obama, etc.) continue to call for President Joe Biden to suspend his reelection campaign, and many in the media believe Biden will withdraw over the weekend. Who will President Trump be running against in the 2024 presidential election?
I attended the RNC last night, and it was one of the most important nights in politics in many years. We all just witnessed an assassination attempt on a presidential candidate, and it was the first time the candidate spoke to the American people.
A lot of people are complaining about the length of the speech, but really, it was two speeches. The first 45 minutes detailed the horrors that took place last Saturday when the bullets started flying at the rally, and Trump also honored the fallen firefighter, Corey Comperatore, who died protecting his own family. Hearing Trump’s testimony was sobering and powerful, and the former President said it was the only time he would ever talk about it because of how painful it was to retell.
Trump also admitted that he didn’t feel like he should be alive after what happened – “only by the grace of almighty God” was he standing at the RNC. Such a tone is not something most would expect from Trump, but he likely feels a newfound liberty to speak in such a different way. It will be fascinating to see if this reflective tone persists throughout the remaining days of the campaign.
The second half of the speech was devoted to Trump’s planned policies for his next presidency. He focused on the economy/inflation, the border crisis, and the relentless lawfare he’s faced the last few years (in which the ACLJ won a U.S. Supreme Court case). He celebrated that Special Counsel Jack Smith’s classified documents case was dismissed on Monday.
So, yes, it was a long speech, roughly 90 minutes long. However, from the start of his address, Trump called for unity, which I’m sure the media will twist in some way to criticize him:
Together, we will launch a new era of safety, prosperity and freedom for citizens of every race, religion, color and creed.
The discord and division in our society must be healed. We must heal it quickly. As Americans, we are bound together by a single fate and a shared destiny. We rise together. Or we fall apart.
I am running to be president for all of America, not half of America, because there is no victory in winning for half of America.
I remember similar unifying rhetoric from Trump eight years ago when he first ran for President. The media claimed he was being divisive, but he reached out to all Americans. And let’s face it: This is the most diverse Republican Party that I can remember, and much of it is because of Trump’s appeal to Americans of all races and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Trump also didn’t send the DOJ after former Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton, even after the chants to lock her up. Instead, President Biden has weaponized the DOJ to go after political opponents. So which side is the divisive one?
Speaking of Biden, the last 24 hours have been remarkable, as the Democrat Party has essentially staged a coup against President Biden. Major news outlets are reporting that Biden is likely on the way out, and NBC News just reported that the Biden family is contemplating a possible exit plan. We might get a definitive answer after the weekend.
Today’s Sekulow broadcast included a full analysis of President Trump’s acceptance speech and what lies ahead for the Biden campaign.
Watch the full broadcast below: