Washington: The streaming video began and, within minutes, the president's eldest son was musing that Osama bin Laden had endorsed Joe Biden.
Subtle, it was not. Welcome to the Trump campaign, digital edition.
Seven nights a week, President Donald Trump's reelection team is airing live programming online to replace his trademark rallies made impossible for now by the coronavirus pandemic.
Hosted by top campaign officials, prominent Republicans and "Make America Great Again" luminaries, the freewheeling shows offer reality according to Trump. The shows are an effort to stay connected with core supporters and maintain enthusiasm for a suspended campaign that has had to rewire itself on the fly. Trump himself has not yet appeared in his campaign's shows.
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A review of one week's worth of the 8 pm broadcasts, ending on the final day of April, reveals a concerted effort to test attacks on Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee. But the inherently limited effort also raises questions as to whether the campaign can replace the gold mines of potentially new voter data that the rallies delivered as it attempts to reverse a recent slide in a number of battleground states.
The shows are a proxy for the "Trump TV" network the president considered launching had he lost the 2016 election, and they create an echo chamber for true believers. Akin to actors in a beloved sitcom well into its run, the Trump officials warmly speak in shorthand, trusting that their audience knows the plot and its characters and are tuning in to see programs that, at times, made the president's infamously off-the-cuff rallies look tightly scripted.
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"Joe Biden had the coveted Osama bin Laden endorsement! That's sort of a big deal!" exclaimed Donald Trump Jr. on April 24, hosting that night's broadcast deemed "Triggered" after his new book.
Trump Jr had seized upon an oddly timed recent Fox News story, which in itself was drawn from 2012 reporting that bin Laden, the late al-Qaida leader, had once proposed assassinating President Barack Obama because doing so would thrust Biden into power and the then-vice president was "totally unprepared for that post," in bin Laden's estimation. Trump cackled while sitting on the couch next to his girlfriend, former Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle, and looked into his Skype camera to declare that even bin Laden knew that Biden "would destroy America."
After Guilfoyle went to cook dinner — it was the couple's second anniversary that night — the president's son, joined by Republican National Committee official Chris Carr and GOP operative David Bossie, continued to make politically incorrect observations that would draw more scrutiny if they were made anywhere other than a fans-only online broadcast.
"China basically screwed the whole world with their lies" about the origin of the coronavirus, Trump Jr. said, before addressing the theory that the pandemic began in a live-animal "wet market" in Wuhan, the epicenter of the Chinese outbreak. "The world would be a better place if China cared a little more about feeding their own people so they don't have to eat bats. I don't know, just a casual observation."