Conventional Contrasts
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| U.S. Senator Tim Scott |
There are, as strategists in Charlotte would agree, advantages to going second. The RNC, who watched and learned from the DNC's mistakes, struck a decidedly different tone Monday night. This would be a time, they decided, not to criticize America but celebrate it. Everyday people, from nurses to dads, took turns sharing heartfelt stories about the country that gave them opportunities, a chance to succeed, a vision for a better life. Others, like Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.) painted a picture of a nation that's fundamentally good, that rises above, that will find a way to be better. "We live in a world that only wants you to believe in the bad news," he said. But "the truth is," he insisted, "our nation's arc always bends toward fairness. We are not fully where we want to be, but I thank God Almighty we are not where we used to be."
But Monday's event wasn't all pom poms and pipe dreams either. There were real problems to address, real crises, real threats to the democracy we cherish. Cuban-born American Máximo Álvarez warned of the dark days ahead if the socialist forces behind the Democratic ticket prevail. "When I watch the news in Seattle and Chicago and Portland, when I see history being rewritten, when I hear the promises -- I hear echoes of a former life I never wanted to hear again," said the man who came to America as a child and refugee. "I see shadows I thought I had outrun," Álvarez continued. "I heard the promises of Fidel Castro. And I can never forget all those who grew up around me, who looked like me, who suffered and starved and died because they believed those empty promises. They swallowed the communist poison pill... I'm here to tell you: we cannot let them take over our country."
Of course, viewers tuning in to the Democratic National Convention never heard those fanatical voices -- the cries to defund the police, punish our faith, pack the courts, and take away our guns and freedom. Why? Because it's unpopular. And, Kyle Smith argues, the party knows it. "If the opening night of the DNC is any indication, Mr. Biden's plan is to stick his agenda under the sofa cushion when talking to the general public and limit himself to the following message: I'm nice, and I'm not Mr. Trump. Don't concern yourselves, he is telling us, with what I... have promised the extremists we will do once we're in power."
Read the platform for yourself -- the "socialist manifesto," some have called it, that will turn America into the world's next Venezuela. There's a reason the GOP spent more time on policy in one hour than every day of the DNC Convention combined. If voters actually understood what the new Democratic Party represents, it would profoundly change the minds of any American who thought they were simply supporting Obama's likeable number two. The New York Times's platform analysis -- "It doesn't make everyone happy" -- is putting it mildly. It's a platform, Senator Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and I discussed on "Washington Watch," that the American people would reject.
For more information on how much your vote matters, check out our Trump Accomplishments document and see the pages of pro-family progress that hangs in the balance. Also, don't miss my analysis on the election and party conventions from this morning's "Washington Journal" interview on C-SPAN.
Tony Perkins (@tperkins) is President of the Family Research Council . Article on Tony Perkins' Washington Update and written with the aid of FRC senior writers.
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