MILWAUKEE โ€” Trump-Vance 2024.

The Republican presidential ticket came together on Monday whenย Donald Trumpย namedย JD Vanceย as hisย running mate. In turning to the 39-year-old Ohio senator, the Republican nominee injected new energy into a campaign that has centered in recent weeks on questions of age following President Joe Biden's disastrous debate performance.

Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump and Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, appear Monday night during the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.ย 

The Republican National Convention opened less than 48 hours after Trump was the subject of a shocking assassination attempt in Pennsylvania.

The shooting, which left Trump injured and one man dead, loomed over the convention with speakers expressing gratitude for the former president's survival and resolved to win back the White House in November.ย ย 

Here are some takeaways from theย first day of the convention.

Trump made a powerful entrance

Just two days after a gunman tried to kill him, Trump walked into the convention hall with a bandage over his injured right ear as the singer Lee Greewood performed โ€œGod Bless the USA,โ€ a regular feature of the former president's rallies. Trump waved to the crowd and pumped his fist in the air, a regular gesture that has taken on new meaning after he made a similar motion from the stage as Secret Service agents whisked him to safety on Saturday.

Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump appears moved Monday night during the Republican National Convention.

The crowd stood and cheered with delight at the sight of their nominee. Trump, who is rarely left without words, made no formal comments. But the sight of him said plenty, offering a palpable reminder of the former president's narrow miss from tragedy.

He then greeted his family before taking a seat between Vance and commentator Tucker Carlson.

GOPโ€™s Trump-era evolution on full display

Senate Republican Leaderย Mitch McConnellย is arguably responsible for the GOP's biggest policy accomplishments, particularly in installing conservative judges at all levels of the judiciary. But that didn't matter much to the Trump-friendly crowd at the RNC, which greeted the Kentucky Republican with boos โ€” a tangible rejection of someone demonized as an establishment Republican who has insufficiently supported the former president.

Just a short while later, Vance enjoyed a much different reception. The second-youngest U.S. senator โ€” and the first millennial to appear on a major party ticket โ€” received raucous applause when he walked onto the convention floor for the first time as Trump's running mate.

The dueling moments offered a window into the changes that have swept the GOP under Trump โ€” bookending an era in which McConnell has gone from one of his partyโ€™s most powerful leaders and incisive tacticians to getting jeered on the convention floor by his own partyโ€™s activists.

Stylistically, McConnell and Vance couldnโ€™t be much more different. Vance, an outspoken MAGA warrior, is one of Trumpโ€™s chief acolytes. McConnell, meanwhile, has an understated demeanor while his political sensibilities are rooted in the GOP of Ronald Reagan.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky walks the convention floor Monday during the Republican National Convention.

Without McConnell, however, the 39-year-old Vanceโ€™s political rise might not have been possible.

Two years ago, Vance was struggling to raise money and up against a well-funded Democratic opponent. McConnellโ€™s super PAC swept in with more than $30 million in advertising spending.

Vance won and began his climb to prominence. McConnell, now in the twilight of his political career, will step down as the GOPโ€™s Senate leader in November.

Leaning into hot-button social issues

A handwritten sign adds Republican Vice Presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, during Monday's Republican National Convention activities.

The first night of the RNC was supposed to be about the economy, with the goal of uniting voters of all ideological persuasions who are frustrated by high prices. But some of the biggest applause lines came from harsh criticisms of transgender people.

Itโ€™s a reminder that cultural issues motivate the GOP base as much as financial ones. A trio of speakers unabashedly went after Democrats who have sought greater acceptance for transgender people. Of particular outrage to Republicans this year was Biden marking Transgender Day of Visibility. It happened to overlap with Easter in 2024, a byproduct of the Christian holiday being based off the lunar calendar.

To many in the LGBTQ+ community, it was a coincidence. But to many Republicans, it was an insult.

โ€œThey promised normalcy and gave us Transgender Visibility Day on Easter Sunday,โ€ said Rep.ย Marjorie Taylor Greene. โ€œAnd let me state this clearly, there are only two genders.โ€

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-WI, speaks Monday during the Republican National Convention.

Other Republicans sought to make the issue a matter of fairness. Their argument was that itโ€™s wrong to ask โ€œgirlsโ€ to compete against transgender athletes. The Biden administration proposed a rule in April that would prevent schools and colleges from enacting outright bans on transgender athletes, a rule that was quickly challenged in court.

Sen.ย Ron Johnson,ย R-Wis.,ย said at the convention it was all part of a โ€œfringe agendaโ€ that โ€œincludes biological males competing against girls.โ€

Rep. John James, R-Mich., tried to equate it to part of a broader critique of Democrats, saying that they promised to offer the country hope and had failed. โ€œOur daughters were sold on hope, and now theyโ€™re being forced on the playing fields and changing rooms with biological males,โ€ James said.

Biden hit hard on inflation

To hear Republicans tell it, inflation had crushed the U.S. economy and itโ€™s all Bidenโ€™s fault.

The argument is a key message for voters who may have doubts about Trumpโ€™s ethics but still trust his economic judgment. None of the speeches at the convention offered much of a detailed explanation as to why prices went up. That would require acknowledging the broken supply chains after the pandemic as well as how Russiaโ€™s invasion of Ukraine pushed up food and energy costs. But Biden pushed through $1.9 trillion in pandemic aid and the GOP argued that Americans have suffered as a result by paying more for groceries and gasoline.

This was all about takingย the troubling inflation data and ignoring the positives in the economy such as a strong job market and solid growth as the economy has recovered.

โ€œSo many American families have to live with so much less,โ€ said Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala. โ€œThis is too high a price to pay for an administration that has brought us to such lows.โ€

But how would the GOP fix inflation?

The speakers never really gave a plan, other than simply returning Trump to the White House.


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