Donald Trump’s Near Death Has Reenergized His Movement

Branko Marcetic reports for Jacobin from the floor of the Republican National Convention, where the near-death experience of Donald Trump and his selection of hard-right running mate J. D. Vance has breathed new life into the MAGA movement.

Former president Donald Trump appears at the first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee following an attempt on his life. (David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images)


MILWAUKEE — “Positive” was the watchword at day one of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee yesterday. It was how attendees described the mood at the event, in line with Donald Trump’s own directive to stress unity and tone down incendiary rhetoric; it was their response to the former president’s close dodging of an assassination attempt this past weekend; and it was how they felt about this coming election, one in which Trump has taken the lead in battleground states in multiple polls and the respected Cook Political Report predicts six states moving toward the Republicans.

Only two days after a bullet nearly ended their candidate’s life, Republicans had practically, like the candidate himself, come face-to-face with death and come out the other side defiant. One attendee had burst into tears when she heard the news. One said she hadn’t been surprised. Another had been getting a haircut.

Many described a sense of relief. Trump’s death would have not only been the end of a beloved political figure, it seemed, but of an irreplaceable political force, no matter how deep they imagined their bench.

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