Our senior political reporter, Jacob Kornbluh, reports from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee:
Donald Trump issued a stern ultimatum to Hamas during his speech accepting the Republican presidential nomination Thursday, to the sound of cheers from the crowd — as well as, at one point, that of a shofar, an increasingly common prop used by far-right Christian nationalists at political events.
Addressing the Gaza conflict, Trump claimed that Hamas would never have attacked Israel had he been in the Oval Office, and promised to bring the war between Israel and Hamas to an end “with a telephone call.” He didn’t, however, elaborate on any vision for a postwar regional peace vision, or commit to stopping Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon — a pledge given by almost every U.S. president.
Trump repeatedly veered off-script through the evening, including by disputing the 2020 election results, praising authoritarians like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, and labeling Nancy Pelosi as “crazy.” At one point, while praising Israel’s Iron Dome and proposing a similar system for the U.S., he complained that America was falling behind Israel in effective defense measures. The speech, which ran for nearly two hours and was broadcast live, was a typical Trump rally spectacle.
By the time the balloons dropped, some supporters deemed the lengthy oration a bust. “It sucked out all the momentum we had,” one Jewish attendee was overheard telling another.
Trump says he had God on his side — Bob Dylan knew it was never that simple. Trump’s profession of faith while recounting the story of his attempted assassination last weekend came across as humble. But he should take warning, writes our PJ Grisar, from Bob Dylan's 1964 song “With God on Our Side,” a wry examination of the ways that people use the delusion of divine support to justify actions that history looks at unkindly. “Such is the paradox of piety,” Grisar writes, “that humility before one’s maker is often just a front for hubris.” Read the story ➤