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The attempted assassination of the former president in Pennsylvania on Saturday has changed the tone of the convention for some, but not all.

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The Republican National Convention has in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The four-day event will be attended by around 50,000 Republicans including 2,400 delegates who are expected to confirm Donald Trump as the Republican candidate for Novemberā€™s presidential election.

The of the former president in Pennsylvania on Saturday has changed the tone of the convention for some, but not all.

Trump has said he will tone down the vitriol in his rhetoric that has been a common feature of his campaign so far. In with the Washington Examiner, he promised that in his speech to the convention, due to be delivered on Thursday, would be rewritten.

ā€œThe speech I was going to give on Thursday was going to be a humdinger,ā€ he said. ā€œHonestly, itā€™s going to be a whole different speech now.ā€

Trump also suggested that he would be speaking to those outside the convention as much as the faithful audience within.

ā€œThis is a chance to bring the whole country, even the whole world, together. The speech will be a lot different, a lot different than it wouldā€™ve been,ā€ he added, as he boarded his plane for Milwaukee.

Itā€™s not the first time that Trump has called for unity in the wake of the assassination attempt. On Sunday morning, he on the Truth Social network that it was ā€œin this moment, it is more important than ever that we stand Unitedā€.

The announced change in rhetoric has been a welcome one for many Republicans, including the speaker of the House of Representatives, Mike Johnson, who called for calm. In with CBS News, Johnson said the US needed to ā€œturn the rhetoric down, weā€™ve got turn the temperature down in this countryā€ and called on leaders of all parties to do so.

The Republican senator for Wisconsin, Ron Johnson, that political figures had been responsible for the divisions in American society and that he would ā€œlike to be able to tone down the rhetoricā€ so that the nation could deal with the challenges the nation faces.

Anger and recriminations

Not all Republicans share those views. Some have to the Democratsā€™ contention that Trump is a as a motivating factor for the assassination attempt.

Senator J.D. Vance, a freshman Senator from Ohio seen by many as a to share the ticket with Trump, was not so forgiving. He that the Bidenā€™s accusations have ā€œled directly to President Trumpā€™s attempted assassinationā€.

Republican congressman Mike Collins shared Vanceā€™s view, just hours after the shooting that ā€œJoe Biden sent the orders,ā€ referencing Bidenā€™s comment that it was .

Ten minutes later, Collins for the Republican district attorney in Butler County, Pennsylvania, to ā€œimmediately file charges against Joseph R. Biden for inciting an assassinationā€.

Despite Trumpā€™s difference in opinion to some of his base, heā€™s unlikely to face much difficulty in presenting a united Republican Party, even though in the US expect the convention to be fiery and full of anger.

Republicans unite behind their man

But Trumpā€™s brush with death on Saturday is likely to remove any internal dissent against his position as the party leader.

Nikki Haley, his most successful opponent in the primary contests, was originally not expected to attend the convention. But after the events in Pennsylvania, Haley that she will not just attend, but speak at the convention.

This is significant. For many moderates, Haley remained the focus of any potential Republican opposition to Trump. Despite officially of the race to be the Republican nominee in March, she continued to gain votes in the primaries, including more than 150,000 .

There is also unlikely to be any opposition of the Trump campaignā€™s rewriting of the partyā€™s stance on abortion. In response to Trumpā€™s position that abortion legislation should be a state and not a federal issue, the has softened the language and has cut short on calling for a national abortion ban.

The campaign teamā€™s decision was confirmed as the Republican Partyā€™s platform by the Republican National Committee . In a move away from tradition, the decision was made behind closed doors and with no press access.

Religious conservatives immediately expressed their opposition to the decision. Chad Connelly, a former chair of the South Carolina Republican Party, that he had been contacted by more than 1,000 individuals who were disappointed with the decision. ā€œThe words I am hearing are shocked, betrayed, trampled, depressed, deflated,ā€ he said.

While he said that most of those who contacted him ā€œwill still probably vote for Trump,ā€ he argued that this disagreement ā€œhurts the energy needed for those folks to do the things it takes to help elect a presidentā€.

But that much of that opposition appears to have relented in light of Saturdayā€™s shooting. Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council Associated Press: ā€œMore divisiveness would not be healthy.ā€

Itā€™s unlikely that Trump will be able to stifle all of the delegatesā€™ anger over this decision. But thereā€™s no doubt that he will retain their support and this weekā€™s convention will undoubtedly be Trumpā€™s coronation.

However, the November election is still a long way off and it is far too early to categorically state that the attempted assassination has cemented his return to the White House.The Conversation

, Teaching Fellow in International Security,

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