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By Doina Chiacu and Joseph Axe
WASHINGTON, 5 Ago (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump proposed Wednesday to accept the GOP presidential nomination in a White House speech, prompting the country’s most sensible Democratic elected official to accuse him of politicizing historic residency.
Meanwhile, his Democratic rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, will settle for his party’s nomination in a national speech at his home state of Delaware that in Milwaukee as planned, party officials said Wednesday.
The coronavirus pandemic has led any of the political parties to reduce the length of the classic television business with noisy speeches in front of thousands of party loyalists.
Trump denied the biggest crowds he thrives in, “we think we’ll do it from the White House.”
Citing security prices for him and an address, Trump told FOX News that keeping him in the White House “would be the least loved from the country’s perspective.”
He said the plan isn’t company because someone suffers with him, but he didn’t give details.
House President Nancy Pelosi, a third-place Democrat in the presidency, told MSNBC: “To have the president of the United States degrade the White House again, as she has done time and time again, by saying that she will politicize it entirely, this is anything that is directly rejected.”
Republican U.S. Senator Ron Johnson said Trump “probably shouldn’t do it.”
The resolution to Biden and other Milwaukee speakers, where Democrats had planned to hold a multi-day nomination conference in person, ensures that the august 17-20 occasion will be almost completely virtual.
Trump told FOX that the Republican conference would be virtual and would come with live speeches from venues, with his acceptance speech on August 27, last night. The media will be invited to a “nominating night” in Charlotte, North Carolina, he said, against reports that it might be closed to reporters.
Coronavirus deaths in the United States have averaged more than 1,000 consistent with the day. The election is November 3 (Report through Doina Chiacu in Washington and Joseph Axe in Princeton, New Jersey; edited through Howard Goller)