President
Trump’s political genius was on display in his 2020 State of the
Union address on Tuesday, as much as were his many achievements from
his first three years.
As the
president began to roll out his introductions of guests in the
gallery, with each one, he was doing a three-for-one. No person with
a heart remained dry-eyed. The stories and the dramas were
electrifying moments for normal people watching and sharing the
guests’ sorrow, joy, pride, hope, and desire for justice.
These
guests also conveyed a political meaning—an in your face challenge
to the Democrats on key policy conflicts such as homelessness,
abortion, school choice, honoring those who sacrifice for our safety
and freedom, borders, and sanctuary cities. Trump was going for the
hot-button issues, not by debating, but by showing their human face.
Each
real-time drama demonstrated how the president delivers for real
people, individual people.
Lastly,
the pathos associated with each guest was paired on camera with the
stony-faced Democrats unwilling to applaud. They didn’t applaud for
all the great statistics showing the lowest black unemployment and
lowest black poverty in history. They didn’t applaud Charles McGee,
the 100-year-old World War II veteran and Tuskegee airman who
President Trump announced he had honored earlier in the day with a
promotion to brigadier general.
Trump
used the opportunity to display both his respect and his
understanding that blacks have been treated as second class citizens
in living memory, relating how after 130 combat missions, McGee
returned home to “a country still struggling for civil rights.”
Trump upped the emotional power by also introducing General McGee’s
13-year-old great-grandson, who aspires to be a Space Force officer,
a new branch of the military President Trump established last year.
Democrats
found nothing here to applaud. They want the race narrative to be
1619, America to be eternally damned as a foundationally racist
country. Trump’s position, in contrast, raises everyone up: “From
the pilgrims to our Founders, from the soldiers at Valley Forge to
the marchers at Selma, and from President Lincoln to the Reverend Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Americans have always rejected limits on our
children’s future.” Trump wants to remind black Americans that
this inheritance of striving and overcoming belongs to them, too.
In
Trump’s America, we are a land of heroes. We all unite in honoring
and loving our common heroes. Whose team would you rather be on?
It was
clear from the choice of guests that President Trump is going all out
for the black vote, with personal stories of courage, success, and
hopes answered. The first five featured guests were African American.
The Democrats scowled through it all. It was shocking.
The
very first was a previously homeless and drug-addled black veteran,
now sober and working thanks to a President Trump supported
enterprise zone, for which Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.) got a special
shout out and a close-up on camera. This was an unspoken challenge to
the Democrats’ failed policies on the homeless.
The
next was awesome because President Trump upped the ante and used a
reality TV approach to create a dramatic moment in real-time. He
introduced Janiyah Davis, an adorable fourth grader and her pretty
single mom, desperate for a better school and better future for her
daughter. Her hopes to get her daughter a good education in a charter
school were blasted by Pennsylvania’s governor, a Democrat, who
vetoed the expansion of school choice for 50,000 children.
President
Trump came to the rescue. “Janiyah, I am pleased to inform you that
your long wait is over. I can proudly announce tonight that an
Opportunity Scholarship has become available, it is going to you, and
you will soon be heading to the school of your choice!”
For
me, the most moving real-time experience was seeing a young mother
and her miracle 2-year-old child, born after only 21 weeks. Trump
didn’t need to make a pro-life argument. He showed it to us in an
unforgettable, living moment. In doing so, he changed that debate
forever.
When
the president announced he was asking Congress to ban late-term
abortion, we weren’t listening to a debate. We were watching a
human face, the face of the child’s mother—seeing intense
emotions surge through her—surprise, gratitude, elation, love,
vindication, triumph.
President
Trump co-opted and promoted initiatives Democrats once claimed,
making them his own: incarceration reform, family leave for men and
women, infrastructure, high-speed internet for all communities,
stamping out human trafficking. Democrats were unwilling to applaud
for anything but the pork-barrel possibilities of infrastructure
spending.
He
also challenged weird and unpopular Democrat policies head-on, from
socialized medicine to protecting criminal aliens. President Trump
introduced a grieving Hispanic man who lost his beloved brother to a
criminal alien released in sanctuary California. It was hard not to
cry as the man struggled to hold back his tears. With that very human
moment, Trump announced a game-changing tactic against Democrats’
sanctuaries for criminal aliens. “Senator Thom Tillis has
introduced legislation to allow Americans like Jody to sue sanctuary
cities and states when a loved one is hurt or killed as a result of
these deadly policies.”
Another
one of Trump’s signature end-runs around seemingly impregnable
Democrat resistance.
Trump
trolled the Democrats with fearless in-your-face conservative causes
such as Second Amendment rights and prayer in the schools.
One of
the greatest moments was bestowing the Presidential Medal of Freedom
on broadcaster Rush Limbaugh.
Previous
Republican presidents have never had the nerve to associate
themselves with the brilliant, funny, accomplished, and cherished
Limbaugh, for fear of the media blowback. President Trump walks right
through those cowardly self-imposed limits and sets off fireworks.
Where
Trump showed political genius over and over, the Democrats came
across as political morons.
And so
it continued all night, culminating in President Trump’s rousing
love song to Americans and America: “Our ancestors built the
most exceptional Republic ever to exist in all of human history. And
we are making it greater than ever before! . . . We settled the new
world, we built the modern world, and we changed history forever by
embracing the eternal truth that everyone is made equal by the hand
of Almighty God. America is the place where anything can happen!
America is the place where anyone can rise. And here, on this land,
on this soil, on this continent, the most incredible dreams come
true! This Nation is our canvas, and this country is our masterpiece.
. . . Our brightest discoveries are not yet known. Our most thrilling
stories are not yet told. Our grandest journeys are not yet made. The
American Age, the American Epic, the American Adventure, has only
just begun!”
It was
at that moment that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) stood,
during the thunderous applause, and tore up President Trump’s
speech. It was no fit of pique. She had obviously practiced and
realized she had to divide the speech in segments and rip each one.
Her gesture was disrespectful, petty and vindictive, but perhaps
worst of all, ludicrous.
The
ranks of President Trump’s supporters are swelling with former
Democrats, with independents, with blacks and Hispanics, and with
former nonvoters. He has earned their trust and their enthusiasm
through bona fide real-life achievements. Trump has surprised
everyone with his capabilities. He has unleashed the power of
Americans to make our country great. We’ve never had a president
like him.
Authored
by Karin McQuillan in American Greatness
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