FiveThirtyEight
Seth Masket

The use of the White House as a political prop in a convention is pretty striking. In 1997, Gore found himself repeatedly in trouble for making Democratic fundraising phone calls from his White House office. While the VP is exempt from the Hatch Act, this was considered a significant norm violation, and it resulted in Attorney General Janet Reno investigating Gore and his public approval dropping. The scandal dogged Gore, who otherwise maintained a pretty clean reputation, and it lingered throughout his presidential run in 2000.

Kaleigh Rogers

We can’t ignore the crowds here. The CDC and WHO still recommend avoiding large, in-person gatherings, and there are currently an estimated 1,900 people on the White House lawn, according to ABC News reporting, sitting less than 6 feet apart and not required to wear masks. If this event were held elsewhere in D.C., it would violate the city’s current COVID-19 laws. This is less risky than, say, a packed convention center — the chance of transmitting COVID-19 outdoors is much lower than indoors because respiratory droplets are diluted in the open air, and the local test positivity rate in D.C. is less than 5 percent, a threshold many experts recommend places cross before returning to certain public gatherings, such as schools. But outdoor transmission isn’t impossible, we’ve had several outbreaks that stemmed from much smaller social gatherings outdoors.

Geoffrey Skelley

Interesting that in this video they showed Hillary Clinton calling to concede to Trump during the 2016 election. Trump hasn’t made it clear whether he will accept the election results if he loses, and he said on the first night of the convention that “the only way they can take this election away from us is if this is a rigged election.”


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