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ElectionsLive updates Election 2024 DNC 2024 Presidential polls Senate races to
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ElectionsLive updates Election 2024 DNC 2024 Presidential polls Senate races to
watch



TRUMP ALLIES TRY TO ENERGIZE HIM AS HE STRUGGLES TO ADAPT TO HARRIS

The Republican nominee has fixated on Biden’s withdrawal: “It feels like he’s
lost his mojo.”

7 min
11675
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump during a campaign event at Desert
Diamond Arena in Glendale, Ariz., on Friday. (Tom Brenner for The Washington
Post)
By Isaac Arnsdorf
, 
Josh Dawsey
and 
Marianne LeVine
August 24, 2024 at 5:02 p.m. EDT

Republican nominee Donald Trump looked cheerful playing golf at his New Jersey
club one day earlier this month, then appeared bored in an afternoon news
conference and dour during a reception with megadonor Miriam Adelson. He
publicly mused about staying home during the Democratic National Convention,
letting Vice President Kamala Harris hold the spotlight unchallenged.



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Several former aides who have known Trump for years said he always preferred to
keep a lighter schedule in August, when his family visited Bedminster and he
usually golfed almost every day.

But aides did not want a situation where he was watching the convention every
night, getting angry, and then just golfing all day and stewing, according to
people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private interactions.
Trump also had grown annoyed with the news coverage that depicted him as not
working as hard as his opponent, one person who talked to him said.

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So the campaign launched back-to-back events over the past week, with the goal
of counterprogramming the Democratic convention and securing news coverage, as
other campaigns have often done, but also as a way to keep Trump busy.

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The candidate, though, often appeared reluctant. He frequently departed from the
policy themes assigned to each day’s event — an attempt to keep him focused on
poll-tested messages over his pugnacious impulses — illustrating his continued
struggle to find his footing in a changed race.

“The stakes for Trump this election are arguably the highest they’ve ever been.
His criminal cases don’t go away if he loses. Yet he seems to be phoning it in,
running a remarkably low-energy, undisciplined campaign,” said Alyssa Farah
Griffin, a former White House spokeswoman who quit after Trump supporters
attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “From spending days off the campaign trail
golfing to coming up with frankly weak nicknames like ‘Kamabala,’ it feels like
he’s lost his mojo.”



By Friday, though, Trump found a thumping audience in a packed 20,000-seat arena
in Glendale, Ariz., the same one Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim
Walz filled a few weeks earlier. He polled the audience on the nickname he
settled on for Harris (Comrade Kamala) after several false starts, while
sarcastically deriding his advisers as “my geniuses.”

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“President Trump has had a robust schedule since he first announced in November
2022,” spokesman Steven Cheung said. “He spent the entire week discussing
substantive policy, something that Kamala Harris refuses to do, or can’t do.”

A person close to the campaign said Trump does not like reading issue-focused
speeches that do not entertain his live audience. At an event Thursday at the
southern border, the first words out of Trump’s mouth took aim not at Harris’s
immigration policies but instead at the Democrats’ decision to choose Harris as
President Joe Biden’s replacement at the top of the ticket.

Cheung said that Trump “is able to connect with voters through a wide range of
events — from massive rallies to more policy-oriented events,” always
communicating “his vision for America.”

While speaking to reporters at an economic-themed campaign event in Las Vegas on
Friday, Trump falsely claimed that Harris did not mention the border and mocked
Harris for repeatedly thanking the crowd before delivering her acceptance speech
at the convention.



Asked about the perception that the change in Democratic candidates had thrown
him off, Trump responded: “No, I think we’re doing great.” He proceeded to
complain about how “unfair” the change was.

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“I spent $100 million fighting against a man that won in their party, and we had
a debate and the debate was good for me,” he said. “And then all of a sudden
they take him out and they put somebody new in that never got a vote.”

Trump has publicly acknowledged his challenge in defining Harris, describing his
goal as to portray her as a “communist.” His frustration with his advisers burst
into public Wednesday when he mocked them for telling him to focus on politics
instead of personal insults. He then polled the crowd on which they preferred
and, when they predictably cheered louder for personal attacks, Trump joked, “My
advisers are fired.”

He has not fired anyone, but he did bring in several former advisers into the
campaign earlier this month, including 2016 campaign manager Corey Lewandowski
and former spokesman-turned-super PAC chief Taylor Budowich. On Thursday’s
border trip, Trump was accompanied by Stephen Miller, his White House
speechwriter and immigration hard-liner who has rarely appeared at campaign
events during this election cycle.

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Amid concerns about the campaign’s focus, some Trump allies have begun trying to
fix some problems. His friend Steve Witkoff, for example, helped broker a
détente with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R), whom Trump extensively attacked during
a rally in Atlanta this month. On Thursday, Trump watched Kemp speak positively
about him in a Fox News interview and responded with a conciliatory social media
post.

At the Glendale rally, hosted by the pro-Trump group Turning Point Action, Trump
welcomed the endorsement of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who suspended his independent
presidential bid early on Friday and received a standing ovation from Trump’s
crowd. Trump is also hoping soon to roll out an endorsement from Tulsi Gabbard,
a former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii.

Trump tried to cut into Harris’s acceptance speech by live-blogging his
real-time reactions on Truth Social, responding with insults, deflections and
non sequiturs. He then called in to both Fox News and Newsmax to continue his
attacks.

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“Donald Trump immediately melted down and hasn’t recovered since,” Harris-Walz
spokeswoman Sarafina Chitika said. “Voters are watching an unhinged and
unserious man rant on Truth Social, rave on Fox News and hold bizarre rallies
where he rambles for hours about his own problems and throws out strange and
dangerous ideas.”

Trump’s campaign logged mentions of his name during the Democratic convention,
hoping to depict the Democratic Party as less focused on policy and more on
being obsessed with him. Across hundreds of name-drops, DNC convention speakers
described Trump as a narcissist, a criminal, a charlatan, a race-baiter and more
in searing speeches suggesting he remains the unifying target of the Democratic
Party.

Most of his allies offered little defense of his character. There was no rapid
response operation to respond to Democratic criticism that he inspired a riot at
the U.S. Capitol, paid hush money to an adult film actress or was found liable
for sexual abuse. Instead, surrogates and aides attacked Harris and Walz for not
addressing Republican policy priorities and made a website portraying Harris’s
policy record in a negative light.

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“They’re focused on Trump rather than the border, inflation or public safety,”
Trump campaign spokesman Brian Hughes told reporters on Tuesday in Chicago.
“Obviously their convention is about who they’re running against and not what
they’re running for.”

Joining Hughes, with large posters behind them highlighting crimes in major
cities, Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) mocked the optimistic message of the
convention, inside Trump’s luxurious hotel here. “Joy and vibes isn’t going to
put food on the table,” he said. “Go take your joy to the mullahs in Iran and
see what happens to you.”

In the coming week, Trump will travel to Michigan, hold a town hall in La
Crosse, Wis., a rally in Johnstown, Pa., and then to Washington for the Moms for
Liberty summit. Harris and Walz, meanwhile, will spend Wednesday and Thursday
campaigning together in a bus tour of Georgia, after which Harris will host a
Thursday evening rally in the Savannah area.


ELECTION 2024

Follow live updates on the 2024 election and Vice President Kamala Harris and
former president Donald Trump from our reporters on the campaign trail and in
Washington

DNC 2024: Catch up on Day 4 of the DNC, where Kamala Harris accepted the
Democratic presidential nomination.

Presidential polls: Check out how Harris and Trump stack up, according to The
Washington Post’s presidential polling averages of seven battleground states.

Senate control: Senate Democrats are at risk of losing their slim 51-49 majority
this fall. The Post breaks down the eight races and three long shots that could
determine Senate control.

VP picks: Harris has officially secured the Democratic presidential nomination
chose chosen Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Midwestern Democrat and former high
school teacher, to be her running mate. GOP presidential nominee Trump chose
Sen. JD Vance (Ohio), a rising star in the Republican Party. Here’s where Vance
and Walz stand on key policies.

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11675 Comments
Election 2024
HAND CURATED
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   RFK Jr. suspends campaign, endorses Trump
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   Democrats head into the weekend energized by convention in Chicago
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