United States | Two-tone Trump

Donald Trump tries to be both unifier and pugilist in his convention speech

The candidate thrills his party but mixes his message

Donald Trump on Day 4 of the Republican National Convention
Photograph: Reuters

THE WEEKS leading up to the Republican National Convention had been some of the best of Donald Trump’s political career. Any news about the Democratic Party seemed to focus on doubts about Joe Biden’s viability as a presidential candidate. Polling showed the race steadily tilting in Mr Trump’s favour. And, just a few days before the party’s gathering, the former president survived an assassination attempt with uncommon poise. When he appeared triumphantly on the stage of the convention on July 18th, Mr Trump had an opportunity to reinforce his dominance of the presidential race. He ended up delivering the longest nomination-acceptance speech in modern American history—and reminding voters that even while striving to appear presidential he remains as pugnacious and polarising as ever.

“I am running to be president for all of America, not half of America,” Mr Trump declared early on. He had hinted beforehand that his remarks would offer an uncharacteristically unifying message—the barn-burner he had planned just wouldn’t work after his brush with death—and the first half hour of the 93-minute oration did exactly that. Speaking with rare restraint, he said “There is no victory in winning for half of America.”

Explore more

More from United States

The demise of an iconic American highway

California’s Highway 1 is showing the limits of man’s ingenuity

How the election will shape the Supreme Court

A second Trump administration could lock in a conservative supermajority for decades


Could the Kamala Harris boost put Florida in play for Democrats?

Some party enthusiasts think so, but realists see re-energised campaigning there as a savvy Florida feint


America is not ready for a major war, says a bipartisan commission

The country is unaware of the dangers ahead, and of the costs to prepare for them

The southern border is Kamala Harris’s biggest political liability

What does her record reveal about her immigration policy?