The Jerusalem Post

A triple whammy of crises tests Trump ahead of Nov.

- • By JAMES OLIPHANT and CHRIS KAHN

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Battered by crisis after crisis, US President Donald Trump appears to be in political peril as never before.

Since taking office in 2017, Trump has weathered storm after storm, always emerging with a fighting chance at being re-elected. After he survived an impeachmen­t trial that saw him acquitted by the Republican-led Senate on February 5, things looked up.

Now Trump’s Teflon shield is being put to an acid test as he faces a triple whammy – the biggest public health crisis in a century, the worst economic downturn in generation­s and the largest civil unrest since the 1960s.

This week, Trump’s calls for a crackdown on nationwide protests over police brutality have drawn rebukes from civil rights advocates, religious leaders, opposition Democrats and some fellow Republican­s. Even former Republican president George W. Bush felt the need to issue a statement that the protesters be heard.

Perhaps of more concern to Trump and his reelection campaign, however, is that almost every opinion poll points to clear signs of erosion of his electoral support since the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, which has taken almost 109,000 American lives since February and led to 40 million jobless claims.

At the same time, his Democratic opponent in the November 3 election, Joe Biden, has re-emerged in public from a coronaviru­s lockdown with a message of unity and civic healing which stands in marked contrast to Trump’s talk of “thugs” and “lowlifes” and “law and order.”

So far, Trump’s aggressive tone does not seem to be matching the moment. An opinion poll by Reuters/Ipsos this week showed that a bipartisan majority of Americans, including twice as many independen­ts, sympathize with protesters and disapprove of Trump’s bellicose response.

REFRAME DEBATE

Republican­s say he has time to turn things around, particular­ly if the economy begins to rebound. And, they note, if the protests persist and become unruly, voters may become more responsive to Trump’s hardline approach.

“As awful as this is, it does allow Trump the opportunit­y to reframe the debate the way he wants it to be – law and order versus chaos,” said Doug Heye, a former Republican National Committee official and frequent Trump critic. “That is part of the conversati­on that he wants.”

A source close to the Trump campaign said the protests have taken attention away from the government’s often-criticized handling of the pandemic. And Trump could ultimately benefit if states continue to reopen their economies and job numbers improve in the fall, said the source, who asked for anonymity to speak candidly.

Right now, though, the numbers are against him.

More than 55% of Americans said they disapprove­d of Trump’s handling of the protests, including 40% who “strongly” disapprove­d, while just one-third said they approved – lower than his overall job approval of 39%, the poll showed.

A separate Reuters poll this week showed Biden’s lead over Trump among registered voters expanded to 10 percentage points – the biggest margin since the former vice president became his party’s presumptiv­e nominee in early April.

This week, for the first time since Biden became the likely nominee, betting markets favored him to beat Trump in November. Both Smarkets, based in the UK, and PredictIT, based in New Zealand, had previously said the odds were with Trump.

With five months to go until the election, there’s plenty of time for those odds to change.

Tim Murtaugh, spokesman for the Trump campaign, said the campaign’s internal data shows the president is “running strong” with Biden in battlegrou­nd states. “Everyone knows public polling is notoriousl­y wrong about President Trump,” he said.

LOSING GROUND

An analysis of Reuters/Ipsos polling since March shows that Trump’s approval, which has remained remarkably consistent over more than three years, has slipped among some demographi­c groups of voters who will be crucial in deciding the election.

An increasing number of Americans who make more than $100,000 a year, those between the ages of 35 and 54 years old and white women with college degrees said they were considerin­g Biden.

Trump’s approval among those earning six-figure salaries dropped 15 percentage points between March and May while Biden’s lead with that group expanded by nine points.

College-educated white women, meanwhile, support Biden over Trump by a 23-point margin, up from 19 points in March. Hillary Clinton, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee in 2016, won this group by seven points. They helped bring Democrats large gains in 2018’s congressio­nal elections.

Biden’s 10-point lead in the head-to-head poll matched two other national polls by Monmouth University and The Washington Post and ABC News. At this point in 2016, Clinton led Trump generally by less than five points.

Trump’s upset victory then still gives his supporters hope he can do it again.

“I still think he gets reelected,” said Craig Robinson, a former political director of the Iowa Republican Party. “And I know what all the polls say.”

Robinson pointed to the US stock market being up almost 40% since the coronaviru­s lockdowns in March as an indicator that “things are not as bad as we thought.”

David Wasserman, an elections analyst with The Cook Report, noted that Trump’s campaign has not been able to fully unleash its attacks on Biden and his record while dealing with the pandemic and protests. That could change this summer.

In addition, because of the makeup of the Electoral College, which dictates the outcome of the election and currently gives Republican­s a structural advantage, Wasserman said Biden could be up by as much as 5% in national polls in November and still lose to Trump.

“This lead is not safe,” Wasserman said.

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