The lineup of speakers at the Republican National Convention underlined the centrality of extremist voices that were once on the fringe, analysts say.
The Republican nominee for governor of North Carolina has said that acceptance of gay people would help bring civilization’s end, that transgender people should be arrested for their choice of bathrooms and that “some people need killing.”
“Every day, Americans are dying — murdered, assaulted, raped by illegal immigrants that the Democrats have released,” he said.that the candidate’s words referenced World War II enemies and were taken out of context in a “gutless and dishonest smear.”. Greene has said that if she had led the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, “it would’ve been armed” and “we would have won.
“A physical fight — that’s never accepted, okay?” he said. “But when we have fights, and if I disagree with you, we’re going to have discussions and maybe we walk away agreeing not to agree. But that’s okay, too.”In the buzz over Trump’s arrival at the RNC on Monday — his first public event since the attack — cameras skimmed over a familiar face sitting in the same row as the former president.but still occupies a powerful perch in the conservative movement.
“They’ve changed our culture,” Beirich said of the MAGA movement’s impact. “They’ve coarsened it, racialized it, and heightened discussions about political violence in a way that was unacceptable before.”Republican appeals for unity after the assassination attempt arrived so abruptly that some convention speakers struggled to keep up.
Speaker Mike Johnson warned that the radical left seeks to tear down American values and “remold us into some sort of borderless, lawless, Marxist, socialist utopia.”Perhaps the most conciliatory message came from Haley, who said Trump invited her to speak “in the name of unity.”
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