‘Sign of unity’: Republicans wear white bandages to show support for Trump ahead of speech

The assassination attempt ‘was truly a surreal moment that people are still processing, and this is a recognizable show of solidarity in a meme-ified political moment’

Donald Trump will get a hero’s welcome Thursday as he accepts the Republican Party’s nomination to run for U.S. president in a speech capping a convention dominated by the recent attempt on his life.

The 78-year-old will address the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin hoping to build momentum toward victory in the November election and a second term in the White House.

Supporters have been lining up all week to applaud the former president for his bravery since Saturday’s assassination bid by a lone gunman at a rally in Pennsylvania.

Many of them have shown up wearing a mock bandage over their right ear, sometimes made of paper, napkin, or of gauze and tape. The white bandage is a show of support for Trump who made his first public appearance following the shooting on Monday night, arriving for the opening night of the convention with a bandaged ear.

“It’s a new sign of unity within the party,” Joe Neglia told Washington Post. The Republican delegate from Arizona says he was the first to make an ear covering out of white paper and affix it to the side of his head. “When I saw him come out Monday night — that magical moment — I thought, ‘I have to do something,’ and this is what I could do.”

The Arizona delegation followed suit and the idea then spread to other delegations, including Texas and Washington State.

We need a symbol about political violence not being acceptable in America

Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist attending the convention, told Washington Post that he was “impressed that American ingenuity responded so rapidly to fill this market.”

“But for all the stylistic flourishes of the Trump era, from hats to sneakers, this one seems the most organic,” Donovan said. “It was truly a surreal moment that people are still processing, and this is a recognizable show of solidarity in a meme-ified political moment.”

Texas delegate Jackson Carpenter told Washington Post that he got his bandage from another delegate.

“We need a symbol about political violence not being acceptable in America,” Carpenter said.

Jackson Carpenter wears a bandage
Texas delegate Jackson Carpenter wears a bandage on his ear, like the one worn by Donald Trump, during the third day of the 2024 Republican National Convention in Wisconsin, on July 17, 2024.Photo by Andrew Harnik /Getty Images

As some of his loyalists blamed Democrats’ rhetoric for the attack, Trump said he had torn up a more aggressive version of his keynote address in favor of one to “unite our country.”

“I’m just grateful we’re going to hear from him. It’s a miracle that his life was spared, and I really believe it was God’s hand,” Teena Horlacher, a 50-year-old convention delegate from Utah, told AFP.

“I’d love for him to talk about Saturday, what his feelings were.”

Trump has seen his poll lead expand since President Joe Biden’s dismal TV debate performance last month threw the Democratic Party into chaos.

The Republican campaign has even been talking up Trump’s chances in Democratic strongholds like Minnesota and Virginia, potentially forcing Biden funds and manpower away from defending his “blue wall” in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

Trump’s keynote address on Thursday evening will be followed on television and online by millions, closing the convention by promising what his team calls as “a new golden age for America.”

It brings down the curtain on four days of speeches from elected officials, entertainers, industry figures and everyday Americans who mixed with some 50,000 Republicans attending the event.

The gathering opened Monday with a vote to confirm Trump as the party’s nominee after he won almost every state’s primary contest.

It has been the first convention over which Trump has had total control, after a 2016 edition hampered by party divisions and a second appearance in 2020 reined in by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Donald Trump with a bandaged ear
Donald Trump looks on during the first day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 15, 2024. Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI /AFP via Getty Images

The schedule was designed around his image, with themes for each day playing on his “Make America Great Again” rallying cry.

The former president set the tone when he walked slowly into the Fiserv Forum arena on the opening day — looking emotional, just two days after the shooting.

The week also saw Trump name right-wing Senator J.D. Vance as his running mate.

The 39-year-old author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” a best-selling memoir about growing up poor in working-class, rural America, is a one-time critic who has become one of Trump’s most staunch backers.

Trump himself was a diminished figure after his 2020 election loss and a subsequent riot at the Capitol in Washington by his supporters, but he has spent much of the last four years reshaping Republican politics.

Installing close allies, including his daughter-in-law Lara Trump on the Republican National Committee, the mercurial tycoon has effectively crushed dissent within the party.

Trump is increasingly confident of winning the election — despite multiple legal problems and two impeachments clouding his first term — as Biden is reeling from weak polls and concerns over his health.

At 81, Biden has been facing growing calls from his own side to quit the race, and he suffered another blow Wednesday when he was diagnosed with Covid-19.

“There’s a clearly stark contrast between the strength of President Trump and the weakness of President Biden,” Mississippi delegate Clifton Carroll told AFP.

“And I think he’ll expand on that, and really send a message that the entire United States of America can get behind whether they’re Republican, Democrat or Independent.”

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