The Sunday Guardian

Trump focuses on virus and jobs ahead of Election Day

-

the White House. It does not matter that he does not get a single vote in the other 38 states. A fair system? The jury is still out on that one.

The present Presidenti­al campaign in the world’s oldest democracy has descended to new lows. Even the “refined” and cerebral Barack Obama, launched an unpreceden­ted personal attack on his successor Donald Trump. He surprised his fans.

The pro-trump Fox News released informatio­n on the strong China connection of challenger Joe Biden, his family, and friends (including his running mate Kamala Harris). The allegation­s are of the Biden family and its buddies reaping billions through permitting access by shady Chinese companies to the highest administra­tive levels in the US.

China hovers large in the background, whether in terms of its virus or unfair trade practices or aggressive posture against US allies in the Indo-pacific region. Without pointing a finger at China, the FBI has just announced that Beijing’s present best friends Russia and Iran have hacked informatio­n about American voters and will unleash a misinforma­tion campaign.

Does Iran have that capability? Probably not (not too long ago it struggled to neutralise the Israeli Stuxnet attack against its nuclear programme). So that begs another question. Who is using Iran? The answer is obvious—at least to informed Americans. A fundamenta­l Shia Islamic “revolution­ary” regime is willingly in bed with a Communist country against their common enemy America.

Perhaps half of eligible and willing voters would have exercised their franchise by the time you read this, through in-person early voting or postal ballots. Will this help Donald Trump or his opponent? Like with the Chinese virus, there is no clear answer. Such numbers have never been experience­d before.

The last Presidenti­al debate on 22 October was much more civil and balanced than the previous one, which was marred by name-calling and interrupti­ons. The moderator in that debate was largely ignored.

So, the second debate included a mute button, operated by an official of the Commission on Presidenti­al debates. He did not use it. Moderator Kristen Welker of NBC News managed the discussion skilfully, with polite firmness.

Donald Trump was calm and “Presidenti­al”. He hit Biden where it hurt—on the sensationa­l charges by a former Biden employee of Chinese money flowing to the Biden family. Biden’s defence that he did not benefit personally from any country sounded hollow.

American mainstream media, especially CNN and MSNBC that detest Trump, focused on the optics of the debate, not so much on its substance.

Tens of millions of Americans watched the debate. But in this deeply divided country, the question of “who won” is irrelevant. Not one voter that I know of changed his mind after the debate.

China was the elephant in the room, especially the global pandemic. The first question to both candidates was about the virus.

Trump announced that a virus vaccine would be available within weeks. The moderator seized on this to say that it was new informatio­n. The President repeated it, acknowledg­ed there could be no guarantee, and, when pressed, said the vaccine might arrive by the end of the year. He claimed that the US Army’s Logistics Division would distribute the 100 million vaccines expected soon.

Biden did not challenge this, expect with a smirk. He was careful not to question the competence of the US military.

According to a most recent survey, some 57% of Americans have been adversely impacted by the virus in terms of their economic well-being. In the past seven months, 42% of US consumers have missed paying one or more bills, while over a third (39%) believe they will need to skip payments in the future.

Over a quarter (27%) of US consumers reported having missed a bill on their auto loans, followed by 26% for utilities and 25% on cable or internet costs.

Americans, so long used to a system in which consumeris­m is king and spending is the magic potion for the economy, are wary about how much savings they have in their bank accounts to weather the tumultuous months ahead. While unemployme­nt figures are recovering from historic troughs, the fear of losing one’s job remains high.

I have been to America many times. On this visit, in Washington DC, New York, Chicago—that I have looked at—there are many more mendicants on the streets (panhandler­s as they are quaintly called).

The direction of the overall economy normally affects stock markets. So, measures of consumer sentiment have historical­ly moved in tandem with major indices like the S&P 500.

Strangely, since the Chinese virus pandemic began, consumer confidence and stock markets have become noticeably misaligned. Even as the economy is in a mild recession (so far), the stock market is booming. Trump’s businessma­n approach to politics seems to have hit a sweet spot.

He wants to open the nation as soon as possible (alleging that Joe Biden wants to lock it down), so that America goes back to work. In some states, schools have reopened, and kids are going back in a staggered manner. In New York where I am at present, most restaurant­s have resumed service, and advance bookings are recommende­d to get a table on the pavements that have become wildly popular extensions of the indoor dining areas

Joe Biden warns of a dark winter ahead, with hundreds of thousands more deaths likely, in addition to the 220,000 Americans already dead. He blamed those deaths squarely on the President, instead of on China. When Trump said Americans were learning to live with the virus, Biden made a school-boyish comment that Americans were learning to die with it.

Donald Trump acknowledg­ed that when the pandemic attacked, America did not know how to deal with it. He was initially advised that it would soon go away. The unsaid suggestion was that in hindsight we all have 20x20 vision.

I was watching the debate with my “Quad+” group in New York. It includes white Americans, African Americans, Europeans, Hispanics, Asians, a Chinese, whose family emigrated to the US two generation­s ago after the Communist takeover, and a Russian Jew.

On the issue of climate change and his decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, Trump said that the atmosphere in America was much cleaner than in “filthy” countries like China, Russia, and India. I squirmed, but then he corrected himself that the “air is filthy”. I told my group that our air quality is indeed poor.

Interestin­gly, once the questions shifted to other subjects such as immigratio­n, my group significan­tly lost interest.

The issue of immigratio­n was discussed, with the President being accused of separating at least 545 children from their parents at the Us-mexican border. He defended his tough zero-tolerance immigratio­n policies by claiming that these children were brought by human trafficker­s and coyotes (a medium-sized dog-like animal related to foxes and wolves—a colloquial term in the US for a person paid by migrants to illegally guide or assist them across the Usmexico border, as opposed to mules who smuggle contraband).

Trump said the broken immigratio­n system was a Barack Obama legacy. Biden acknowledg­ed the mistakes made when he was Vice President.

Trump struck a chord with many white Americans when he said that “bad” people had brought the children into the US. The parents (trying to run away from economic desperatio­n and violent crime) were led to believe that their children would be the anchors for their own immigratio­n to the US. Non-college white Americans, mainly bluecollar factory workers, are Donald Trump’s core supporters, who want their country back.

They are acutely aware that their lifestyles and value-systems that built America (integrity, ethics, trust, hard work) are being challenged by the millions of people from the developing world (including China)— “the wretched refuse of your teeming shore” as Ms Liberty proclaims—who have come or want to come to the US.

In 2016, Trump was helped to victory by winning a record margin among white voters without a college degree. In the last four years, they have declined as a share of the voting-eligible population, going from 45% of eligible voters to 41%. But they will vote in significan­t numbers.

Having seen Ronald Reagan on television­s several times during my posting in Washington DC in the early 1980s, I could not help notice that Joe Biden tried to copy him at times, looking straight into the camera and addressing the American people.

So where are we in this fascinatin­g circus today?

In India, the anti-incumbency factor is often blamed for unexpected election results. In America, the three Presidents before Donald Trump have all had consecutiv­e terms.

In these uncertain times, despite all his idiosyncra­sies, Donald Trump is a known entity. He is focusing on the two things that matter most to Americans—the virus and jobs. Joe Biden, uncharisma­tic and uninspirin­g, has failed to show his magic wand for these two critical issues.

Desperate for reassuranc­e, Americans would prefer continuity to change. They do not want things to get worse. Now, more than ever, they want their “great” America back, with their jobs, their homes, their cars, their luxuries. Trump is not yet packing his bags to leave the White House.

For well-informed Indian Americans, who have realised the American dream, the forthcomin­g visit of the top US defence and foreign affairs officials (for in-person, not virtual, meetings with their Indian counterpar­ts), despite the roundthe-corner elections, is satisfying evidence that while India may not have fallen into America’s lap, America is certainly in India’s lap. Deepak Vohra is former Indian Ambassador to Armenia, Georgia, Sudan, South Sudan, Poland and Lithuania. Another report by the author, “China is Public Enemy No. 1 in US election” is also a part of this edition.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India