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One Thing: Trump Survives Assassination Attempt (Plus, Latest on GOP Platform)
CNN 5 Things
Jul 14, 2024
The Republican National Convention is scheduled to get underway on Monday in Milwaukee, despite a shooting at former President Donald Trump’s rally on Saturday night that the FBI says was an assassination attempt. While the draft language of the official party platform puts Trump front and center, some say it does not go far enough on key issues. In this episode, we look at what it says and why Trump is distancing himself from a more extreme pro-Trump plan called Project 2025.
Guest: Alayna Treene, CNN Politics Reporter
Episode Transcript
David Rind
00:00:00
Last night, there was a shooting that is now being investigated as an assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump. Let that sink in. It's a truly staggering moment in an already unprecedented election. But if you're just catching up, here's what happened.
Former President Donald Trump
00:00:19
This is a big crowd. This is a big, big beautiful.
David Rind
00:00:24
Trump had just taken the stage at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, just north of Pittsburgh, and just a few minutes into his speech. Around 6:15 p.m. eastern, there were a series of loud pops.
Former President Donald Trump
00:00:36
I really see something that said, take a look at what happened.
David Rind
00:00:46
Trump stops speaking and grabs his right ear. Almost immediately, he drops to the ground. Secret service agents rush the podium. They climb on top of him.
Agents
00:00:56
He missed their home. When you're ready. On you. Ready? Whoop, whoop.
David Rind
00:01:01
After about a minute, the agents stand up with Trump. They're trying to shield him from view, but you can clearly see bright red blood pouring down his face. Cheer. The crowd cheers as he stands up and you can see Trump trying to push through the agent's arms so he can raise his fist in the air. He's actually able to poke his head out and unleashes a few defiant yells at the crowd to show he's okay. After Secret Service, then rushed Trump into a van and it sped off to a nearby medical center. Trump escaped with his life, but this was a deadly attack, the Secret Service said. At least one rally goer was killed. Two others were injured. They said agents neutralized the suspected shooter, who had opened fire from an elevated position outside the protective rally zone. A few hours later, Trump wrote on social media that he was shot in the upper part of his right ear that a bullet ripped through the skin. Trump allies quickly sent out messages of concern, and President Joe Biden addressed the nation from outside Wilmington, Delaware, joining in a chorus of lawmakers from both sides of the aisle saying that political violence is not the answer.
President Joe Biden
00:02:17
The bottom line is that the Trump rally was a rally that he should have been able to have can be conducted peacefully without any problem. But the idea, the idea that there's political violence or violence in America like this is just unheard of. It's just not appropriate. And we everybody, everybody must condemn it. Everybody.
David Rind
00:02:37
There are many, many more questions about the suspected shooter, their motivations, and the apparent failure in security preparations that CNN will be following closely in the days ahead. But a senior Republican official tells CNN that the Republican National Convention will open up as planned on Monday in Milwaukee, and the official platform the party will be considering could have a big impact on all Americans if Trump wins back the white House. My guest is CNN politics reporter Alayna Treene. We spoke last week before the rally today, what that platform actually says, and how it differs from a much more radical right wing blueprint built by Trump allies. From CNN, this is One Thing I'm David Rind.
David Rind
00:03:29
So, Alayna, amid all this drama surrounding President Joe Biden and the Democratic Party, it dawns on me that the Republican National Convention gets underway this week in Milwaukee. There's no question about whether Donald Trump is the guy at the top of that ticket, despite his criminal conviction and other felony charges. So I want to explore the actual policy, like what this version of the Republican Party stands for and what that might mean for Americans if Trump wins the white House. So tell me, what exactly is this party's platform?
Alayna Treene
00:03:58
Well, David, first of all, I just want to state how the convention is really going to be a Trump coronation. And what I find really interesting about it this year is that Donald Trump, a TV producer at heart, is finally getting the type of production that he's been craving. And I think, you know, look back at 2016, the first time Donald Trump accepted the nomination, he was still facing a lot of resistance from within the party.
Sen. Ted Cruz
00:04:23
If you love our country and love your children as much as I know that you do, stand and speak and vote your conscience. Vote for candidates up and down the ticket who you trust.
Alayna Treene
00:04:37
Kind of punctuated by Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who took the stage and refused to endorse Trump, telling the delegates to vote your conscience,.
David Rind
00:04:48
I remember that.
Sen. Ted Cruz
00:04:49
I appreciate the enthusiasm of the New York delegation.
Alayna Treene
00:04:56
And in 2020, a lot of Donald Trump's big plans were squandered due to the pandemic. So this year, it really is going to be the Trump show. And with that comes a platform that really reflects him and his branding. And so what I find really notable about this platform is how different it is from the years past. And parts of it really read like a Trump rally, which isn't totally surprising given that Trump himself helped edit it and even wrote some of it. Now, just to walk you through some of the most notable parts of it that I found to be the most interesting.
Former President Donald Trump
00:05:33
I will not cut one penny from Social Security or Medicare, and I will not raise the retirement age by one.
Alayna Treene
00:05:41
It abandons long held positions on abortion and same sex marriage, while also embracing new plans for mass deportations of millions of undocumented immigrants as part of the platform for the Republican Party.
Former President Donald Trump
00:05:55
Joe Biden wants to be the president for illegal aliens, but I will be the president for law abiding Americans of every background, every walk of life.
Alayna Treene
00:06:05
It proposes ending the education department. It calls to deport, quote, pro Hamas radicals. It calls to build a great Iron dome over the country and end the weaponization of the Department of Justice. Now, there's a bunch of other things in there, including ending the electric vehicle mandate.
Former President Donald Trump
00:06:24
And I will keep men out of women's sports. Can you imagine? Can you imagine even having just say that?
Alayna Treene
00:06:33
So all of this very key to what Donald Trump himself has been saying on the campaign trail for the last several months, in the lead up to November.
David Rind
00:06:45
Yeah, it seems like all kind of red meat Trump based stuff. But what should we make about the softening of this language around abortion? Like, I thought this was the party that worked for decades to overturn Roe v Wade, and now you're saying they don't want to go even further like a national abortion ban or something like that?
Alayna Treene
00:07:01
Yeah. There's no mention of a national abortion ban in this platform. And I will say past platforms going back decades for the Republican Party have always included, some sort of line about a national ban. And so this actually took that out and it's only mentioned abortion is only mentioned once in this entire platform.
David Rind
00:07:21
Once. Wow.
Alayna Treene
00:07:23
But look, it kind of reflects the fine line that Trump has struggled to walk himself. Now, just from my reporting, in my conversations with Donald Trump and the people he talks to, he really changes his rhetoric on this depending on who he's talking to. So in some conversations, he will take credit for being the one who was responsible for the Dobbs ruling.
Former President Donald Trump
00:07:42
Many people have asked me what my position is on abortion and abortion rights, especially since I was proudly the person responsible for the ending of something that all legal scholars both sides wanted and in fact demanded be ended. Row v Wade. They wanted.
Alayna Treene
00:08:01
But in other occasions he also says that the issue was a political loser, and he believes that personally. And he says this both privately and publicly, that Republicans need to win elections. And so this platform itself really reflects Trump's sort of dodge on the issue.
Former President Donald Trump
00:08:16
Many states will be different. Many will have a different number of weeks, or some will have more conservative than others. And that's what they will be at the end of the day. This is all about the will of the people.
Alayna Treene
00:08:29
Leaves the issue to the States. And like I said, it does not mention a national abortion ban which had been in past platforms.
Former President Donald Trump
00:08:38
They basically had, in some cases, gay bans. I don't want that. And so what we're about, they had other things that are ridiculous.
Alayna Treene
00:08:48
Another interesting part as well, kind of tied to this, is that the platform removes the language from 2016, condemning the Supreme Court's 2015 decision granting same sex couples the right to marry. Now, the new language in this platform actually does not weigh in really on same sex marriage at all. And so definitely a softening of what we've seen the Republican Party platform include in the past. But I will say we have seen more of this extreme language in another document, a much longer and more far reaching one called project 2025.
David Rind
00:09:33
So, Alayna, before the break, you mentioned this project 2025. And honestly, I've been seeing it a lot over social media like the last couple of weeks. But for those who don't follow, like the ins and outs of this, like political chatter super closely, can you just explain like what is project 2025?
Alayna Treene
00:09:48
So part of 2025 is essentially a blueprint crafted by Trump's allies to radically reshape the federal government and American life. Should Donald Trump or another conservative Republican president be elected in the future? So they argue that this is for any conservative who could become president, but much of it is geared directly toward Donald Trump. Now the lead architect behind project 2025 is the Heritage Foundation, which I should note is a sponsor of the convention. They created this 900 page playbook. 900 pages did not mess that up. It is a massive document. And it essentially wants to fill the executive branch with thousands of Trump loyalists and reorient many of its agencies missions around conservative ideals.
Wolf Blitzer
00:10:38
Donald Trump is once again denying any knowledge of what's called project 2025, the conservative playbook that potentially could radically change America.
Alayna Treene
00:10:49
What's interesting and why you've probably seen it, like you said in the past couple of days, is that Trump, on social media recently claimed that he knows nothing about project 2025. And essentially saying parts of it are ridiculous.
Kristen Holmes
00:11:02
Statement on Truth Social, he said I know nothing about project 2025. I have no idea who is behind it. I disagree with some of the things they're saying, and some of the things they're saying are absolutely ridiculous and abysmal. Anything they do, I wish them luck, but I have nothing to do with them, obviously.
Alayna Treene
00:11:19
But the plan actually includes many policy priorities that are aligned with those of the former president, especially as they relate to cracking down on immigration and purging the federal bureaucracy by making it easier to dismiss civil servants and career officials, something both Donald Trump and this plan embraces. But it also does include several controversial proposals that Trump has not discussed, including banning pornography, reversing federal approval of the abortion pill mifepristone, excluding the morning after pill, and men's contraception from the Affordable Care Act, and making it harder for transgender adults to transition. Now, his campaign has been trying to distance themselves from this as well over the past several months, saying that any policy that does not come directly from the campaign is not a reflection of the former president. But many of Donald Trump's fiercest allies, including several people who served in his former administration people like Stephen Miller, Mark Meadows, John McEntee, Russ Vout. All of them are partners on this project. And they're also some of these people that I just mentioned are people many in Donald Trump's world and inner circle believe will have some sort of role in a second administration. And I do want to just tell my colleagues, Steve Caetano did this brilliant internal review of this 900 page agenda, and he found that at least 140 people who worked in the Trump administration has had had had a hand in this project. Yeah.
David Rind
00:12:50
So it seems like that would really strain credulity that Trump has no idea what this is or who is involved with it. Like, he obviously knows these people.
Alayna Treene
00:12:58
He does. And many of these people he talks to still on a regular basis. But again, this isn't something that was crafted by Donald Trump's own internal policy team on his campaign. This is something that has been created by the Heritage Foundation. But again, there's so much of this that does reflect what Donald Trump himself is pushing for. But he is not, you know, putting his stamp of approval on the entire thing.
David Rind
00:13:23
Well, yeah, I was going to say they insist it's not endorsed by the Trump campaign, but like, is there a world where Trump takes office next year and looks at this 900 pages and can pick out specific blueprints or guidelines or policies that he likes and then can implement in short order.
Alayna Treene
00:13:39
Oh, absolutely. I mean, that's the whole point of this project. They did this because, well, there's there's a couple reasons. One is that they want this to be the official transition document that Donald Trump uses if he is elected. So one, it's also to help fill his administration with people that they've already been vetting and interviewing. And then the other part of this is, of course, enacting some of this policy. And again, the Heritage Foundation has said that they believe this is for any conservative Republican who could take office next and sit in the Oval Office. But this is very much geared toward Donald Trump. But again, there are parts of it that are not things that Donald Trump agrees with.
David Rind
00:14:15
Well, so even as the Republicans get ready to kind of dominate the airwaves this week, obviously the Biden drama is still very much front and center in Washington and beyond. So how is Team Trump kind of thinking about this? Will he or won't he of Biden running or not?
Alayna Treene
00:14:32
'Well it's actually. Been fascinating to watch because ever since the debate, Donald Trump has been really trying to let Joe Biden be the story. And that is a deliberate effort. I am told by his advisers on their part to keep the hand-wringing within the Democratic Party front and center. Now, you know, when I talked to his team, it's been interesting because they are trying to figure out what's going to happen as much as the rest of the world as they are watching this, like the rest of America. And they have no idea what could happen if Joe Biden were to ultimately step aside. When I talk to them, they actually want Joe Biden to continue to be the candidate they have planned for months. I mean, their entire campaign down to the modeling, the massive data operation that they have created, the millions of dollars they have spent on ads, all of that has been geared toward beating Joe Biden.
David Rind
00:15:24
And I imagine they like drawing the contrast of having the energetic Trump against a candidate in Biden, who they see as weak and frail, and the idea of somebody coming in who maybe has more pep in their step would be a blow to them.
Alayna Treene
00:15:37
Exactly. But I will also say on this at the same time, I mean, Donald Trump is entering one of the most marquee periods of his campaign with this convention. He is yet to announce his vice presidential pick, and he wants those to dominate headlines as well. And so this has been a struggle behind the scenes to see what can grasp the public's attention. Keep the media focused on the news that Donald Trump wants them to be focused on, while also letting them continue to watch the criticism being aimed at Joe Biden from people within his own party. So it's been an interesting juggling act, and I will say the convention is going to be him accepting the nomination. He'll be giving a speech, but most of it is a formality. Had he had gotten the delegates months ago. But also everyone in the party is as really even those who have criticized him in the past are really lining up behind him and want to show this united front.
David Rind
00:16:28
Like you said, he's going to have a full week of a Trump show at the convention. Are you going to be in Milwaukee?
Alayna Treene
00:16:34
I will be, I'll be there for the whole thing.
David Rind
00:16:36
I'll see you there. Thank you Alayna. Appreciate it.
Alayna Treene
00:16:38
Thank you.
David Rind
00:16:51
One thing is a production of CNN audio. This episode was produced by Paola Ortiz and me, David Rind. Our senior producer is Fez Jameel. Our supervising producer is Greg Peppers. Matt Dempsey is our production manager. Dan Dzula is our technical director. And Steve Licktieg is the executive producer of CNN Audio. We get support from Haley Thomas, Alex Mansory, Robert Mathers, John Dianora, Leni Steinhart, Jamus Andrest, Nicole Pesaru, and Lisa Namerow.. Special thanks to Katie Hinman. We'll be back on Wednesday from the RNC. I'll talk to you then.