Medicine Hat News

Presidenti­al politics, sidelined by pandemic, poised for Trump-fuelled comeback

- JAMES MCCARTEN

Donald Trump’s re-election efforts appear to be showing new signs of life despite lingering concerns about whether the accelerate­d reopening in parts of the United States could prompt a second wave of the novel coronaviru­s.

Those marathon White House task force briefings, a fixture at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic last month, have all but disappeare­d, done in at least partly by the president’s disastrous musings about UV light and disinfecta­nts as potential treatments.

Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany has taken over podium duties while Trump, keen to get back on the campaign trail, takes tentative steps outside the national capital, most recently in Arizona. There, his visit to a Honeywell maskmaking facility bore many of the familiar hallmarks of a Trump campaign rally.

This time, however, it’s the American economy he wants to make great again - and the outcome of the vote in November likely depends on it.

“Right now, it does not redound to his benefit at all, but his hope is for a strong recovery by the time it matters for the election,” said Paul Beck, a professor of politics at Ohio State University in Columbus.

“That is why he is pushing for early opening, though with rhetoric that attempts to protect himself if that opening goes badly.”

That includes new references to Americans as “warriors,” a term both McEnany and the selfdescri­bed “wartime president” have used in recent days, in the fight against COVID-19 — a turn of phrase that has some wondering whether Trump is bracing voters for the likelihood that U.S. residents are putting themselves in harm’s way as the country continues to reopen.

“They said, ‘We have to close our country.’ Well, now it’s time to open it up,” Trump said this week.

“And you know what? The people of our country are warriors, and I’m looking at it. I’m not saying anything is perfect. And, yes, will some people be affected? Yes. Will some people be affected badly? Yes. But we have to get our country open, and we have to get it open soon.”

Here’s why: a new Monmouth University poll out Wednesday suggested Trump has been losing ground to Joe Biden, even as the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee contends with a historic allegation of sexual assault and a campaign that’s been relegated to fundraisin­g emails and videoconfe­rence calls.

Respondent­s to the poll conducted late last week gave Biden 50 per cent of the decided vote, compared with 41 per cent for Trump - a significan­tly wider gap than the 48 per cent to 44 per cent ratio reported in April. The poll carries a margin of error of 3.6 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The gap narrowed slightly when Justin Amash, a Michigan congressma­n and former Republican who’s planning a run under the Libertaria­n banner, is added to the mix: support for Biden dropped to 47 per cent and Trump to 40 per cent, with Amash at five per cent.

At those levels, and with third-party candidates having a history of being largely ignored on the presidenti­al ballot, it hardly seems like Amash could play a spoiler role. But in critical battlegrou­nd states like Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, where the margin is expected to be razor-thin, his presence could have a considerab­le impact.

Ohio, too - the Rust Belt state Trump has said he plans to visit next.

“The choices of Arizona and Ohio are not accidents — these are two states that are seen as swing states, and Arizona seems to be in play,” said Capri Cafaro, a former Ohio senator and executive in residence at the American University School of Public Affairs in Washington, D.C.

“Obviously, it seems as if there is a great desire on behalf of the president to get out of Washington to resume his time on the campaign trail as much as possible, given the circumstan­ces. That’s really where his comfort zone is, where he’s in his natural habitat.”

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Donald Trump

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