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Tucker Carlson spoke at the Republican National Convention, addressing Donald Trump and what the now GOP nominee did after he was shot, saying that when Trump put his fist up after getting shot, that he was made a leader of the nation.

"When [Trump] stood up after being shot in the face, bloodied, and put his hand up, I though at that moment, this was a transformation," Carlson said in the RNC speech. "He was no longer just a political party’s nominee. This was the leader of a nation."

Donald Trump's pick for vice president, J.D. Vance, has backed up calls for the mass deportation of illegal immigrants in the United States, despite it being unclear how such a program would be achieved.

The junior senator from Ohio was chosen by Trump at the Republican National Convention in Wisconsin earlier this week and used part of his speech on Wednesday to focus on immigration, a topic the GOP sees as a key plank of its general election strategy.

Former President Donald Trump finally took the stage at the Republican National Convention Thursday night, speaking publicly for the first time since he nearly fell to a sniper’s bullet at a rally in western Pennsylvania.

But Trump wasn’t the only person to speak to GOP delegates at the Fiserv Forum. As they have on the previous three nights, a host of Trump supporters, ranging from former administration officials to professional wrestlers, took the stage ahead of him.

Donald Trump made a forceful case for a second term in the White House on the final night of the Republican National Convention, capping a dramatic week that included an assassination attempt and Trump's selection of a running mate amid growing calls for his Democratic rival, President Joe Biden, to drop out of the race.

On a night Republicans projected bravado around their 2024 presidential ticket, Donald Trump started his prime-time address by displaying a rare vulnerability.

In his speech capping off the Republican National Convention as he accepted the party’s nomination for a third consecutive election, Trump recounted Thursday night his attempted assassination five days earlier at a Pennsylvania rally.

“I’m not supposed to be here tonight,” he told the crowd at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee.

Former President Donald Trump referenced his “right to try” experimental treatment legislation during his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention on Thursday, signaling that expanding access to novel treatments for terminal patients may be a key proposal if he were to win reelection.

“‘Right to try’ is a big deal,” Trump said during his acceptance speech. “They were trying to get that for 52 years.”

Former President Trump turned the 2024 Republican National Convention into a campaign rally in his first speech since surviving an assassination attempt, claiming God was on his side during the shooting and calling for his party to unify to “save this country.”

Trump divulged the details of his near-death experience as he addressed thousands in attendance in Milwaukee and formally accepted the GOP presidential nomination.

Here are the five big takeaways from the last night of the convention.

Rarely has the appearance of a party’s nominee on a convention stage been as intensely anticipated as that of Donald Trump in Milwaukee.

Nearly assassinated last Saturday and still bandaged from his wound to his ear, Trump was rapturously greeted each time he entered the convention hall this week, and his speech was tantalizingly teased as completely reworked after the shooting last weekend.

The "new" Donald Trump soothed and silenced the nation for 28 minutes last night. Then the old Trump returned and bellowed, barked and bored America for 64 minutes more.

Why it matters: Despondent Democrats were reminded why they had long believed, before President Biden melted down in last month's debate, that Trump is a flawed candidate — and eminently beatable.

Five days after narrowly escaping assassination, Donald Trump will accept his presidential nomination on Thursday before an adoring crowd of supporters, the final act in his transformation of the Republican Party into the party of Trump.

His brush with death has fueled the growing quasi-religious fervor among the party faithful, elevating him from political leader to a man they believe is protected by God.