1
U(DF463D)X+@!,!@!$!" Many farms in the Midwest have begun serving pizza, socially distanced, on summer nights. Above, a pie at Luna Valley Farm in Decorah, Iowa. PAGE D1 FOOD D1-8 Pepperoni Amid the Cornstalks With fewer people and more protocols, the country’s largest museum is ready to welcome back visitors. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Met Ready to Shine Again Some in Wisconsin were stunned as buildings went up in flames after Jacob Blake, a Black man, was shot. PAGE A23 NATIONAL A23-25 Anguish Over Police Shooting Britons have stormed restaurants, pubs and cafes to take advantage of a stimu- lus program in which the government picks up half the check. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 Rush to Grab a Table in Britain The C.D.C. quietly modified guidelines on testing, but some experts called the move “potentially dangerous.” PAGE A4 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-7 No Symptoms, No Need to Test HBO’s “I May Destroy You” prompted some cathartic moments for the re- viewer Salamishah Tillet. PAGE C1 A Path Back From Assault The U.S. is taking aim at a small German port city to try to halt a nearly complete Russian gas pipeline. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A8-12 Targeting Ally With Sanctions Gail Sheehy, 83, plumbed the character of newsmakers for insights. PAGE B11 OBITUARIES B10-11 Writer Who Explored Lives Black former players said doctors used two scales — one for Black athletes, one for white — to determine eligibility in the concussion settlement. PAGE B7 SPORTSWEDNESDAY B7-9 N.F.L. Faces Bias Claims Thomas L. Friedman PAGE A26 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 In March and April, as ambu- lances raced through neighbor- hoods and refrigerated trucks sat humming behind hospitals over- whelmed by the pandemic’s dead, summer seemed a distant fantasy. Then it arrived as promised: the city unveiled in a series of phases that brought its streets back to something closer to life. The coronavirus infections dropped, the curve flattened, din- ner and drinks were served be- neath the stars and friends reunit- ed in parks and on beaches as if home from a war. But throughout the city, be- tween the elbow bumps and happy hours, lurked a deep and in- tense anxiety over what might lie ahead, as summer gives way to autumn and a new rash of fright- ening unknowns. September, always both an end- ing and a beginning, seems this year almost impossibly fraught, its usual rhythms — back to school, back to work — upended. In interviews, New Yorkers, even as they leaned into summer activities and visited parks and cafes, shared a common forebod- ing that looked beyond the virus itself. Schools, the economy, crime, food, shelter, travel and ac- cess to family, planning a vacation — nothing feels like a given in these waning days of August. “I don’t think it’s going to get better,” said Angel Vasquez, 39, a data processor, visiting Bush Ter- minal Piers Park in Brooklyn with his three young daughters. “I think it’s going to get worse.” On most days, New York’s rate of infection hovers below 1 percent of the roughly 25,000 tests per- formed each day in the city. Simi- larly, the number of positive tests Summer Glimpses of Post-Pandemic Life Turn to Fears About Fall By MICHAEL WILSON The Brooklyn Bridge at sunset. New Yorkers got back outside during summer as infections fell. SEPTEMBER DAWN BOTTOMS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A6 To get onto his Facebook ac- count, the police used Tony Chung’s body. When officers swarmed him at a Hong Kong shopping mall last month, they pulled him into a stairwell and pinned his head in front of his phone — an attempt to trigger the facial recognition sys- tem. Later, at his home, officers forced his finger onto a separate phone. Then they demanded pass- words. “They said, ‘Do you know with the national security law, we have all the rights to unlock your phones and get your pass- words?’” Mr. Chung recalled. Emboldened by that new law, Hong Kong security forces are turning to harsher tactics as they close a digital dragnet on activists, pro-democracy politicians and media leaders. Their approaches — which in the past month have included installing a camera out- side the home of a prominent poli- tician and breaking into the Face- book account of another — bear marked similarities to those long used by the fearsome domestic se- curity forces in mainland China. Not accustomed to such pres- sures, Hong Kong lawmakers and activists, and the American com- panies that own the most popular internet services there, have struggled to respond. Pro-democ- racy politicians have issued in- structions to supporters on how to secure digital devices. Many have flocked to encrypted chat apps like Signal and changed their names on social media. Dogged by the global reach of the law, even people from Hong Kong living far away from the city worry. One Facebook discussion group of Hong Kongers living in Australia closed off public access after a user claimed to have re- ported discussions to the Hong Kong authorities for potentially violating the law. Major internet companies like Facebook and Twitter have tem- porarily cut off data sharing with As China Sets a Digital Dragnet, Hong Kong Dodges and Weaves By PAUL MOZUR Continued on Page A10 STOCKTON, Calif — Work be- gan in the dark. At 4 a.m., Briseida Flores could make out a fire burn- ing in the distance. Floodlights il- luminated the fields. And shoul- der to shoulder with dozens of oth- ers, Ms. Flores pushed into the rows of corn. Swiftly, they plucked. One after the other. First under the lights, then by the first rays of daylight. By 10:30 a.m., it was unbear- ably hot. Hundreds of wildfires were burning to the north, and so much smoke was settling into the San Joaquin Valley that the local air pollution agency issued a health alert. Ms. Flores, 19, who had joined her mother in the fields after her father lost his job in the early days of the coronavirus pan- demic, found it hard to breathe in between the tightly planted rows. Her jeans were soaked with sweat. “It felt like a hundred degrees in there,” Ms. Flores said. “We said we don’t want to go in anymore.” She went home, exhausted, and slept for an hour. All this to harvest dried, ocher- colored ears of corn meant to dec- orate the autumn table. Like the gossamer layer of ash and dust that is settling on the trees in Central California, climate change is adding on to the hazards already faced by some of the coun- try’s poorest, most neglected la- borers. So far this year, more than 7,000 fires have scorched 1.4 mil- lion acres, and there is no reprieve in sight, officials warned. Summer days are hotter than they were a century ago in the al- ready scorching San Joaquin Val- ley; the nights, when the body would normally cool down, are warming faster. Heat waves are more frequent. And across the state, fires have burned over a million acres in less than two weeks. One recent scientific paper concluded that climate change had doubled the frequency of ex- treme fire weather days since the 1980s. In the valley is where the smoke gets stuck when the wind blows it in from the north and south. Still, hundreds of thousands of men and women like Ms. Flores continue to pluck, weed, and pack produce for the nation here, as temperatures soar into the triple digits for days at a time and the air turns to a soup of dust and smoke, stirred with pollution from truck Battling Heat And the Virus At the Harvest Brutal Summer Work Grows Even Harder By SOMINI SENGUPTA Continued on Page A24 Vice President Mike Pence, the head of the federal coronavirus task force, delivered a clear mes- sage to governors about reopen- ing schools. Help us help you, Mr. Pence told the state executives during a virtual meeting in early July, stressing that the adminis- tration wanted to see children back in the classroom. “You all build your plan, we’ll work with you,” Mr. Pence said, according to a recording of the session. He added, “We’re here to help.” The next day, Mr. Pence’s boss issued a different message to states. On July 8, President Trump accused Democrats of try- ing to obstruct the reopening of schools for political reasons and threatened retribution: “May cut off funding if not open!” he tweeted. If Mr. Pence felt embarrassed or undermined by the president’s outburst, he did not show it. In- deed, when he held another call with governors a week later, Mr. Pence made no mention of the president’s ultimatum, instead re- iterating his own more diplomatic plea that states make every effort to reopen their education sys- tems. “Our bottom line is: We’re with you,” Mr. Pence said on July 13. Over the past four years, that stark contrast in approach — and the ultimate, unquestioned su- premacy of Mr. Trump — has de- fined the political partnership be- tween the president and his run- ning mate. Since Mr. Trump plucked Mr. Pence from the gover- norship of Indiana to serve as so- cially conservative ballast on a thrice-married real estate mogul’s ticket, Mr. Pence has grown accus- tomed to performing such acro- batics, maneuvering around or di- aling back in private what Mr. Trump bellows in public. The cumulative effect of Mr. Pence’s conduct is to create around him a kind of artificial bub- ble of relative normalcy, in which the vice president avoids Mr. Trump’s most explosive and divi- sive behavior mostly by pretend- ing it does not exist. Mr. Pence never expresses overt disagreement with Mr. ‘Good Soldier’ Pence Walks Line Between Loyalty and His Future By ALEXANDER BURNS and MAGGIE HABERMAN Continued on Page A18 DiAnna Schenkel is a law school graduate who once ran on the Democratic ticket for her city council. She voted twice for Barack Obama. A 59-year-old sub- urbanite in North Carolina, she worries about her Black son-in- law being racially profiled by the police, pulled over and beaten or worse. The portrait of a Biden voter? No, Ms. Schenkel, who is white, is a confirmed supporter of Don- ald J. Trump. She voted for him en- thusiastically four years ago after becoming disillusioned with the Obama presidency, and plans to vote for his re-election. At the same time, she is wary of express- ing her politics openly because she believes that stereotypes of what she calls “Trumpers” like herself, as portrayed on social me- dia and in conversations, are smug and spiteful. “There’s so many people throw- ing down really inflammatory words: Racist. Xenophobic,” she said of the way people regard Trump supporters. “And these in- flammatory words carry emo- tions. It just pivots people to where they’re not going to even tolerate someone for supporting that person. You’re automatically put on trial and you have to testify why you believe what you be- lieve.” As Mr. Trump takes center stage at the Republican National Convention this week, he main- tains a core of rock-solid support- ers like Ms. Schenkel who believe he is fighting in America’s best in- terests and has achieved many of his goals — which are their goals too. He has aggressively cultivat- ed these voters over the last few months with scathing criticism of vandalism that has occasionally arisen from mostly peaceful pro- tests calling for racial justice, and by boasting that, pre-coronavirus, he had built an economy second to none. For Democrats and many inde- pendents, Mr. Trump has shat- tered the norms of presidential be- havior with racist tweets and divi- sive policies; his use of federal agencies to advance his personal interests; and, perhaps most im- portant, his detachment from Trump’s Goals Are Their Goals, And the Tweets Are Irrelevant By TRIP GABRIEL Continued on Page A20 American Airlines said it would shed up to 19,000 workers if the industry did not receive government aid. PAGE A25 Airline Warns of Job Cuts President Trump made a bid to sand down his divisive political image by appropriating the re- sources of his office and the pow- ers of the presidency at the Re- publican convention on Tuesday, breaching the traditional bound- aries between campaigning and governing in an effort to broaden his appeal beyond his conserva- tive base. In an abrupt swerve from the dire tone of the convention’s first night, Mr. Trump staged a grab- bag of gauzy events and personal testimonials aimed in particular at women and minority voters. In videos recorded at the White House, Mr. Trump pardoned a Ne- vada man convicted of bank rob- bery and swore in five new Ameri- can citizens, all of them people of color, in a miniature naturaliza- tion ceremony. Where the convention on Mon- day emphasized predictions of so- cial and economic desolation un- der a government led by Demo- crats, the speakers on Tuesday — including three from Mr. Trump’s immediate family — hailed the president as a friend to women and a champion of criminal justice reform. There was no effort to rec- oncile the dissonance between the two nights’ programs, particu- larly the shift from Monday’s rhet- oric about a looming “vengeful mob” of dangerous criminals into Tuesday’s tributes to the power of personal redemption. It was not clear whether this new appeal would change the minds of women, minorities and others who formed negative opin- ions of Mr. Trump over the last five years, amid the allegations of sex- ual assault against him, the ap- peals to racial bigotry and hard- line policies like a border crack- down that separated migrant fam- ilies. The coronavirus pandemic was largely confined to parenthetical comments within the speeches, and, not wanting to remind view- ers of the virus, nobody who ap- peared during the course of the evening wore a mask. Melania Trump, the first lady, addressed it TRUMP TAKES AIM AT MIDDLE, USING TOOLS OF OFFICE BID TO BROADEN APPEAL G.O.P. Points Message at Both Women and Minority Voters By ALEXANDER BURNS and JONATHAN MARTIN Continued on Page A16 VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,797 + © 2020 The New York Times Company WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2020 PETE MAROVICH FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION PETE MAROVICH FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Clockwise from top left, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke from Jerusalem; Melania Trump thanked frontline workers; Eric Trump said a vote for his father “is a vote for the American spirit”; Tiffany Trump talked of “a fight for freedom versus oppression.” DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Printed in Chicago $3.00 Sunny. Record-challenging heat. Thunderstorms far north. Highs in upper 80s to 90s. Mostly clear skies tonight. Very hot again for most to- morrow. Weather map, Page B12. National Edition

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C M Y K Yxxx,2020-08-26,A,001,Bs-4C,E2_+

U(DF463D)X+@!,!@!$!"

Many farms in the Midwest have begunserving pizza, socially distanced, onsummer nights. Above, a pie at LunaValley Farm in Decorah, Iowa. PAGE D1

FOOD D1-8

Pepperoni Amid the CornstalksWith fewer people and more protocols,the country’s largest museum is readyto welcome back visitors. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Met Ready to Shine AgainSome in Wisconsin were stunned asbuildings went up in flames after JacobBlake, a Black man, was shot. PAGE A23

NATIONAL A23-25

Anguish Over Police Shooting

Britons have stormed restaurants, pubsand cafes to take advantage of a stimu-lus program in which the governmentpicks up half the check. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

Rush to Grab a Table in BritainThe C.D.C. quietly modified guidelineson testing, but some experts called themove “potentially dangerous.” PAGE A4

TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-7

No Symptoms, No Need to Test

HBO’s “I May Destroy You” promptedsome cathartic moments for the re-viewer Salamishah Tillet. PAGE C1

A Path Back From Assault

The U.S. is taking aim at a small Germanport city to try to halt a nearly completeRussian gas pipeline. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A8-12

Targeting Ally With Sanctions

Gail Sheehy, 83, plumbed the characterof newsmakers for insights. PAGE B11

OBITUARIES B10-11

Writer Who Explored Lives

Black former players said doctors usedtwo scales — one for Black athletes, onefor white — to determine eligibility inthe concussion settlement. PAGE B7

SPORTSWEDNESDAY B7-9

N.F.L. Faces Bias Claims

Thomas L. Friedman PAGE A26

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27

In March and April, as ambu-lances raced through neighbor-hoods and refrigerated trucks sathumming behind hospitals over-whelmed by the pandemic’s dead,summer seemed a distant fantasy.Then it arrived as promised: thecity unveiled in a series of phasesthat brought its streets back tosomething closer to life.

The coronavirus infectionsdropped, the curve flattened, din-ner and drinks were served be-neath the stars and friends reunit-ed in parks and on beaches as ifhome from a war.

But throughout the city, be-tween the elbow bumps andhappy hours, lurked a deep and in-tense anxiety over what might lieahead, as summer gives way toautumn and a new rash of fright-ening unknowns.

September, always both an end-ing and a beginning, seems thisyear almost impossibly fraught,its usual rhythms — back toschool, back to work — upended.

In interviews, New Yorkers,even as they leaned into summeractivities and visited parks andcafes, shared a common forebod-

ing that looked beyond the virusitself. Schools, the economy,crime, food, shelter, travel and ac-cess to family, planning a vacation— nothing feels like a given inthese waning days of August.

“I don’t think it’s going to getbetter,” said Angel Vasquez, 39, adata processor, visiting Bush Ter-minal Piers Park in Brooklyn withhis three young daughters. “Ithink it’s going to get worse.”

On most days, New York’s rateof infection hovers below 1 percentof the roughly 25,000 tests per-formed each day in the city. Simi-larly, the number of positive tests

Summer Glimpses of Post-Pandemic Life Turn to Fears About FallBy MICHAEL WILSON

The Brooklyn Bridge at sunset. New Yorkers got back outside during summer as infections fell.SEPTEMBER DAWN BOTTOMS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A6

To get onto his Facebook ac-count, the police used TonyChung’s body.

When officers swarmed him ata Hong Kong shopping mall lastmonth, they pulled him into astairwell and pinned his head infront of his phone — an attempt totrigger the facial recognition sys-tem. Later, at his home, officersforced his finger onto a separatephone. Then they demanded pass-words.

“They said, ‘Do you know withthe national security law, we haveall the rights to unlock yourphones and get your pass-words?’” Mr. Chung recalled.

Emboldened by that new law,Hong Kong security forces areturning to harsher tactics as theyclose a digital dragnet on activists,pro-democracy politicians andmedia leaders. Their approaches— which in the past month haveincluded installing a camera out-side the home of a prominent poli-tician and breaking into the Face-book account of another — bear

marked similarities to those longused by the fearsome domestic se-curity forces in mainland China.

Not accustomed to such pres-sures, Hong Kong lawmakers andactivists, and the American com-panies that own the most popularinternet services there, havestruggled to respond. Pro-democ-racy politicians have issued in-structions to supporters on how tosecure digital devices. Many haveflocked to encrypted chat appslike Signal and changed theirnames on social media.

Dogged by the global reach ofthe law, even people from HongKong living far away from the cityworry. One Facebook discussiongroup of Hong Kongers living inAustralia closed off public accessafter a user claimed to have re-ported discussions to the HongKong authorities for potentiallyviolating the law.

Major internet companies likeFacebook and Twitter have tem-porarily cut off data sharing with

As China Sets a Digital Dragnet,Hong Kong Dodges and Weaves

By PAUL MOZUR

Continued on Page A10

STOCKTON, Calif — Work be-gan in the dark. At 4 a.m., BriseidaFlores could make out a fire burn-ing in the distance. Floodlights il-luminated the fields. And shoul-der to shoulder with dozens of oth-ers, Ms. Flores pushed into therows of corn. Swiftly, theyplucked. One after the other. Firstunder the lights, then by the firstrays of daylight.

By 10:30 a.m., it was unbear-ably hot. Hundreds of wildfireswere burning to the north, and somuch smoke was settling into theSan Joaquin Valley that the localair pollution agency issued ahealth alert. Ms. Flores, 19, whohad joined her mother in the fieldsafter her father lost his job in theearly days of the coronavirus pan-demic, found it hard to breathe inbetween the tightly planted rows.Her jeans were soaked withsweat.

“It felt like a hundred degrees inthere,” Ms. Flores said. “We saidwe don’t want to go in anymore.”

She went home, exhausted, andslept for an hour.

All this to harvest dried, ocher-colored ears of corn meant to dec-orate the autumn table.

Like the gossamer layer of ashand dust that is settling on thetrees in Central California, climatechange is adding on to the hazardsalready faced by some of the coun-try’s poorest, most neglected la-borers. So far this year, more than7,000 fires have scorched 1.4 mil-lion acres, and there is no reprievein sight, officials warned.

Summer days are hotter thanthey were a century ago in the al-ready scorching San Joaquin Val-ley; the nights, when the bodywould normally cool down, arewarming faster. Heat waves aremore frequent. And across thestate, fires have burned over amillion acres in less than twoweeks. One recent scientific paperconcluded that climate changehad doubled the frequency of ex-treme fire weather days since the1980s.

In the valley is where the smokegets stuck when the wind blows itin from the north and south.

Still, hundreds of thousands ofmen and women like Ms. Florescontinue to pluck, weed, and packproduce for the nation here, astemperatures soar into the tripledigits for days at a time and the airturns to a soup of dust and smoke,stirred with pollution from truck

Battling HeatAnd the VirusAt the Harvest

Brutal Summer WorkGrows Even Harder

By SOMINI SENGUPTA

Continued on Page A24

Vice President Mike Pence, thehead of the federal coronavirustask force, delivered a clear mes-sage to governors about reopen-ing schools. Help us help you, Mr.Pence told the state executivesduring a virtual meeting in earlyJuly, stressing that the adminis-tration wanted to see childrenback in the classroom.

“You all build your plan, we’llwork with you,” Mr. Pence said,according to a recording of thesession. He added, “We’re here tohelp.”

The next day, Mr. Pence’s bossissued a different message tostates. On July 8, PresidentTrump accused Democrats of try-ing to obstruct the reopening ofschools for political reasons andthreatened retribution: “May cutoff funding if not open!” hetweeted.

If Mr. Pence felt embarrassed orundermined by the president’soutburst, he did not show it. In-deed, when he held another callwith governors a week later, Mr.Pence made no mention of thepresident’s ultimatum, instead re-iterating his own more diplomatic

plea that states make every effortto reopen their education sys-tems.

“Our bottom line is: We’re withyou,” Mr. Pence said on July 13.

Over the past four years, thatstark contrast in approach — andthe ultimate, unquestioned su-premacy of Mr. Trump — has de-fined the political partnership be-tween the president and his run-ning mate. Since Mr. Trumpplucked Mr. Pence from the gover-norship of Indiana to serve as so-cially conservative ballast on athrice-married real estate mogul’sticket, Mr. Pence has grown accus-tomed to performing such acro-batics, maneuvering around or di-aling back in private what Mr.Trump bellows in public.

The cumulative effect of Mr.Pence’s conduct is to createaround him a kind of artificial bub-ble of relative normalcy, in whichthe vice president avoids Mr.Trump’s most explosive and divi-sive behavior mostly by pretend-ing it does not exist.

Mr. Pence never expressesovert disagreement with Mr.

‘Good Soldier’ Pence Walks LineBetween Loyalty and His Future

By ALEXANDER BURNS and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Continued on Page A18

DiAnna Schenkel is a law schoolgraduate who once ran on theDemocratic ticket for her citycouncil. She voted twice forBarack Obama. A 59-year-old sub-urbanite in North Carolina, sheworries about her Black son-in-law being racially profiled by thepolice, pulled over and beaten orworse.

The portrait of a Biden voter?No, Ms. Schenkel, who is white,

is a confirmed supporter of Don-ald J. Trump. She voted for him en-thusiastically four years ago afterbecoming disillusioned with theObama presidency, and plans tovote for his re-election. At thesame time, she is wary of express-ing her politics openly becauseshe believes that stereotypes ofwhat she calls “Trumpers” likeherself, as portrayed on social me-dia and in conversations, aresmug and spiteful.

“There’s so many people throw-ing down really inflammatorywords: Racist. Xenophobic,” shesaid of the way people regardTrump supporters. “And these in-flammatory words carry emo-tions. It just pivots people to

where they’re not going to eventolerate someone for supportingthat person. You’re automaticallyput on trial and you have to testifywhy you believe what you be-lieve.”

As Mr. Trump takes centerstage at the Republican NationalConvention this week, he main-tains a core of rock-solid support-ers like Ms. Schenkel who believehe is fighting in America’s best in-terests and has achieved many ofhis goals — which are their goalstoo. He has aggressively cultivat-ed these voters over the last fewmonths with scathing criticism ofvandalism that has occasionallyarisen from mostly peaceful pro-tests calling for racial justice, andby boasting that, pre-coronavirus,he had built an economy second tonone.

For Democrats and many inde-pendents, Mr. Trump has shat-tered the norms of presidential be-havior with racist tweets and divi-sive policies; his use of federalagencies to advance his personalinterests; and, perhaps most im-portant, his detachment from

Trump’s Goals Are Their Goals,And the Tweets Are Irrelevant

By TRIP GABRIEL

Continued on Page A20

American Airlines said it would shed upto 19,000 workers if the industry did notreceive government aid. PAGE A25

Airline Warns of Job Cuts

President Trump made a bid tosand down his divisive politicalimage by appropriating the re-sources of his office and the pow-ers of the presidency at the Re-publican convention on Tuesday,breaching the traditional bound-aries between campaigning andgoverning in an effort to broadenhis appeal beyond his conserva-tive base.

In an abrupt swerve from thedire tone of the convention’s firstnight, Mr. Trump staged a grab-bag of gauzy events and personaltestimonials aimed in particularat women and minority voters. Invideos recorded at the WhiteHouse, Mr. Trump pardoned a Ne-vada man convicted of bank rob-bery and swore in five new Ameri-can citizens, all of them people ofcolor, in a miniature naturaliza-tion ceremony.

Where the convention on Mon-day emphasized predictions of so-cial and economic desolation un-der a government led by Demo-crats, the speakers on Tuesday —including three from Mr. Trump’simmediate family — hailed thepresident as a friend to womenand a champion of criminal justicereform. There was no effort to rec-oncile the dissonance between thetwo nights’ programs, particu-larly the shift from Monday’s rhet-oric about a looming “vengefulmob” of dangerous criminals intoTuesday’s tributes to the power ofpersonal redemption.

It was not clear whether thisnew appeal would change theminds of women, minorities andothers who formed negative opin-ions of Mr. Trump over the last fiveyears, amid the allegations of sex-ual assault against him, the ap-peals to racial bigotry and hard-line policies like a border crack-down that separated migrant fam-ilies.

The coronavirus pandemic waslargely confined to parentheticalcomments within the speeches,and, not wanting to remind view-ers of the virus, nobody who ap-peared during the course of theevening wore a mask. MelaniaTrump, the first lady, addressed it

TRUMP TAKES AIMAT MIDDLE, USING

TOOLS OF OFFICE

BID TO BROADEN APPEAL

G.O.P. Points Message atBoth Women andMinority Voters

By ALEXANDER BURNSand JONATHAN MARTIN

Continued on Page A16

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,797 + © 2020 The New York Times Company WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2020

PETE MAROVICH FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION

PETE MAROVICH FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Clockwise from top left, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke from Jerusalem; Melania Trump thanked frontline workers; EricTrump said a vote for his father “is a vote for the American spirit”; Tiffany Trump talked of “a fight for freedom versus oppression.”

DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Printed in Chicago $3.00

Sunny. Record-challenging heat.Thunderstorms far north. Highs inupper 80s to 90s. Mostly clear skiestonight. Very hot again for most to-morrow. Weather map, Page B12.

National Edition