The Standard (St. Catharines)

Trump hops across electoral map

Biden limits appearance­s in public while preparing for Thursday’s debate

- ZEKE MILLER, WILL WEISSERT AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump is hopping from one must-win stop on the electoral map to the next in the leadup to a final presidenti­al debate that may be his last, best chance to alter the trajectory of the 2020 campaign.

As Democrat Joe Biden holes up for debate prep in advance of Thursday’s faceoff in Nashville, Tenn., he’s hoping for a boost from former president Barack Obama, who was to hold his first in-person campaign event for Biden on Wednesday in Philadelph­ia.

Obama, who has become increasing­ly critical of Trump over the three and a half years since he left office, will address a drive-in rally, where supporters will listen to him over the radio inside their cars.

It comes a day after Trump, trailing in polls in many battlegrou­nd states, stopped in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday. Trump was bound for North Carolina on Wednesday as he delivers what his campaign sees as his closing message.

“This is an election between a Trump super recovery and a Biden depression,” the president said in Erie, Pa. “You will have a depression the likes of which you have never seen. If you want depression, doom and despair, vote for Sleepy Joe. And boredom.”

But the Republican president’s pitch that he should lead the rebuilding of an economy ravaged by the coronaviru­s pandemic has been overshadow­ed by a series of fights. In the past two days, he has attacked the nation’s leading infectious disease expert and a venerable TV newsmagazi­ne while sug

gesting that the country was tired of talking about a virus that has killed more than 221,000 people in the United States.

Before leaving the White House for Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday, Trump taped part of an interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes” that apparently ended acrimoniou­sly. On Twitter, the president declared his interview with Lesley Stahl to be “FAKE and BIASED,” and he threatened to release a White House edit of it before its Sunday airtime.

Also trailing in fundraisin­g for campaign ads, Trump is increasing­ly relying on his signature campaign rallies to maximize turnout among his GOP base. His trip to Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday was one of what is expected to be several visits to the state in the next two weeks.

“If we win Pennsylvan­ia, we win the whole thing,” Trump said in Erie.

Erie County, which includes the aging industrial city in the

state’s northwest corner, went for Obama by five percentage points in 2012, but broke for Trump by two in 2016. That swing, fuelled by Trump’s success with white, working-class, non-college-educated voters, was replicated in small cities and towns and rural areas and helped him overcome Hillary Clinton’s victories in the state’s big cities.

But Trump will probably need to run up the score by more this time around as his prospects have slipped since 2016 in voterich suburban Philadelph­ia, where he underperfo­rmed by past Republican measures. This raises the stakes for his campaign’s more aggressive outreach to new rural and smalltown voters across the industrial north.

His aides worry that his opponent is uniquely situated to prevent that, as Biden not only hails from Scranton but has built his political persona as a representa­tive of the middle and working classes.

Trump, who spoke for less than an hour, showed the crowd a video of various Biden comments on fracking in a bid to portray the Democrat as opposed to the process. The issue is critical in a state that is the second leading producer of natural gas in the country. Biden’s actual position is that he would ban new gas and oil permits, including for fracking, on federal lands only. The vast majority of oil and gas does not come from federal lands.

As Trump was on the road, Biden was meeting at his lakeside home in Wilmington, Del., with senior adviser Ron Klain, who is in charge of debate preparatio­n. Also on hand: a group of aides that the campaign has purposely kept small to reduce the risk of spreading the coronaviru­s.

Biden, who taped his own interview with “60 Minutes” on Monday at a theatre near his home, had no public events Tuesday or Wednesday and wasn’t scheduled to travel.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mock debaters perform onstage as preparatio­ns take place for the second Presidenti­al debate at Belmont University, in Nashville, Tenn. The debate will be held Thursday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mock debaters perform onstage as preparatio­ns take place for the second Presidenti­al debate at Belmont University, in Nashville, Tenn. The debate will be held Thursday.

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