The Weekend Post

President will unite the nation

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ONE picture encapsulat­es the polarised politics of the pandemic in America, with implicatio­ns for November’s presidenti­al election.

A man in green surgical garb and N95 mask stands in the middle of a road in Denver, Colorado, blocking the path of an SUV headed for a protest to demand the city reopen for business.

The obstructed driver, a middleaged blonde wearing an American flag T-shirt, is leaning out her car window, brandishin­g a placard reading “LAND of the FREE”.

In an accompanyi­ng video posted on social media, she is heard yelling “’This is a free country,” at the man and a nearby counter-protester also dressed as a nurse, but not confirmed to be a health worker.

“Go to China if you want communism!”

The images went viral, so to speak, and appeared to depict an America that is losing its mind. The insta-narrative was that COVID-19 “truthers” are attacking the very health workers who have put their lives on the line, while the Bad Orange Man in the White House eggs them on.

In reality, the protests in places like Colorado, California and Michigan are not as insane as they sound.

While news out of the US is focused on the epicentre in New York City, with more than 10,000 deaths, what has been lost in translatio­n is that the virus has disproport­ionately hit Democratic states such as New York, California, Michigan and Washington.

Yet other less populated areas of the country remain largely untouched, while subjected to the same kind of economy-wrecking, life-depleting lockdown restrictio­ns.

It’s a blue state-red state viral divide. In Encinitas, California, for instance people with banners reading “surfing is not a crime” and “saltwater is safe,” protested the closure of beaches and hiking trails.

Similarly, in Michigan, protesters rallied against mercurial overreach by Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a putative running mate for

Joe Biden who has been dubbed “Half Whitmer” by Trump.

Encouragin­g statistics show that social distancing and “shelter in place” efforts over the past five weeks have succeeded in “flattening the curve” of infections to avoid overwhelmi­ng hospitals and to allow testing of optimal therapies.

So Trump has laid out guidelines for states to lift restrictio­ns, such as a declining number of cases for 14 days, but has left it up to individual governors to decide how quickly to open.

The President is champing at the bit to get the economy moving again, tweeting a call on the weekend to “liberate” the Democratic states of Michigan, Minnesota and Virginia which, not incidental­ly, will be crucial to his re-election.

On Monday he described the protesters as “great people. They’ve got cabin fever. They want their lives back”.

The protests offer an insight into the way the November presidenti­al election will play out.

While his daily cage fights with reporters in the White House briefing room are unseemly, and the Democrats and Trump-hating media are working hard to blame him for the virus, his job approval figures have risen since the outbreak. The latest Harvard CAPS/Harris poll gives him an all-time high of 49 per cent.

But there also are ominous signs for the president. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal on showed just 36 per cent of Americans trust what Trump says about the coronaviru­s.

And he trails Biden by eight points in the Harvard poll, which is remarkable, considerin­g the Democrat’s candidate has been hiding in his basement in a brain fog behind a teleprompt­er.

But Trump is a political Houdini. His re-election will rest on keeping the virus at bay and the economy sputtering back to life. His tactics will include uniting Americans around a common enemy, China’s communist regime, and portraying Biden as soft on China.

As Americans emerge into the sunlight to survey their ruined economy, you can bet Trump will be focusing their anger on China.

He will point to last year’s trade wars to demonstrat­e that he has been a China hawk from the start, in contrast to Biden, who has been an apologist for the Communist regime, with a history of questionab­le family investment­s.

Miranda Devine is in New York for 18 months to cover current affairs for

 ??  ?? POLITICS: Opposing protesters standoff in Denver as tensions rise.
POLITICS: Opposing protesters standoff in Denver as tensions rise.

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