Republican National Convention

If “I’m sitting in a crowd” at the White House, “risking catching coronavirus, God damn it, I want a Trump speech," the "Daily Show" host said.
The New Yorkers, interviewed by a federal housing official, didn't know they’d be featured at the Republican National Convention, The New York Times reported.
The president tweeted that he'd received "great ratings," but the actual numbers for the RNC prove the exact opposite.
"I fell short of my own standard," concedes Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) after telling everyone else to wear a face mask to protect against COVID-19.
Unemployment is in double-digits, renters are scared of eviction notices, aid is stuck, and economic recovery seems to have slowed.
GOP speakers repeatedly brought up that their presidential candidate was nearly thrown out of office over corruption.
The long march of the conservative movement has led the party from a majority to a minority that increasingly opposes democracy.
The "Fox & Friends" co-host reasoned that if Joe Biden can do a speech from his house, why can't the president? Except Biden didn't do his speech from his home.
The fight for the future of the Republican Party has already begun, and one possible contender is even Trumpier than the president.
President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani used his speech at the Republican National Convention to spin an unfounded conspiracy theory that Democrats orchestrated violent protests to harm Trump politically.