One of the Republican National Convention’s most jarring moments came on Tuesday night, when Donald Trump turned a naturalization ceremony into a partisan stunt, effectively playing the role of a game-show host handing out a cherished prize.
Indeed, even by this president’s standards, it was a cynical spectacle, brazen not only in its politicization of government functions, but also in its contradiction of the immigration policies espoused by the White House in which the stunt took place.
A Washington Post analysis explained, “That ceremony, the culmination of five long journeys toward achieving recognition as American citizens, happened in the White House quite obviously so that it could be filmed and incorporated into Trump’s reelection effort. The legitimate achievements of those five people was something that, for [acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad] Wolf and Trump, became an opportunity to score political points.”
Vox’s Zack Beauchamp added that the display was offensive because of “the way in which real live human beings — five people, new Americans achieving something they’ve wanted for years — participating in what should be a moving and deeply personal ritual, were reduced to bit players in a very special episode of the Trump show. They were being deployed for a specific purpose: to pull the wool over America’s eyes about who Donald Trump is. The scene was meant to reassure: Trump isn’t a xenophobe; look at these immigrants he’s welcoming — people of color to boot!”
Late yesterday, however, the story managed to get a little worse. The Wall Street Journal reported that at least some of these new citizens were put on display at a political convention without their consent.









