Jamaica Gleaner

Fighting in swing states

Trump forced to play defense in states he won handily in 2016

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WASHINGTON (AP): President Donald Trump is being forced to play electoral college defence with a trip to Iowa, a state he won handily in 2016, but where Democrat Joe Biden is making a late push before the November 3 vote.

Trump’s heavy travel this week, including a rally on Wednesday in Des Moines, reflects his uphill climb three weeks before the election. He has already visited Pennsylvan­ia and Florida; will head to another state, North Carolina, he can’t win without; and plans stops in Iowa and Georgia, which he once thought were in his grasp, but where recent polling shows a competitiv­e race.

In a virtual address to the Economic Clubs of New York, Florida, Washington, DC, Chicago, Pittsburgh and Sheboygan, Wisconsin, the president said the election was a choice between “a socialist nightmare and the American dream”.

His trip to Iowa comes as the state this week surpassed 100,000 coronaviru­s cases and has seen a recent surge in hospitalis­ations. Biden has tried to make Trump’s handling of the pandemic, which has killed more than 215,000 Americans, the central issue of the election.

“But President Trump isn’t coming to the Hawkeye State to offer words of comfort to those suffering, or a helping hand to the Iowans who are out of a job, or an actual plan to get the virus under control,” Biden said in a statement. “Instead, he’s here to spread more lies about the pandemic and distract from his record of failure.”

Officials at the Des Moines airport, where Trump’s rally will be held in a cargo hangar, have been told to plan for up to 10,000 people. A public health emergency declared by Governor Kim Reynolds in March remains in place and requires that organisers of mass gatherings “must ensure at least six feet of physical distance between each group or individual attending alone”. Reynolds, a Trump ally, was expected to appear at the event.

Trump has resumed a breakneck schedule this week after being sidelined from campaignin­g when he was diagnosed with the coronaviru­s. He held rallies in Florida and Pennsylvan­ia on Monday and Tuesday, and planned to be in North Carolina on Thursday. Trump has appeared hale in his public appearance­s since re-emerging from quarantine, though at moments during his address to the economic clubs on Wednesday his voice sounded raspy.

The president said he was baffled how some in business could even consider Biden, and he played up his commitment to keeping taxes low and deregulati­ng industry.

Biden has travelled at a more aggressive clip in the past week, visiting Arizona, Nevada, Florida and Pennsylvan­ia. The former vice-president isn’t introducin­g new themes in his pitch that he’s a steady alternativ­e to Trump. Biden and his aides believe the president’s whipsawing

campaign since his COVID-19 diagnosis proves the core of Biden’s case.

DUELLING TOWN HALLS

The candidates will have duelling town-hall meetings Thursday night on network television — Trump’s in Miami and sponsored by NBC News, Biden’s in Philadelph­ia and on ABC. Debate organisers last week changed their original plan for a town-hall debate that night to a virtual event after Trump’s coronaviru­s diagnosis, but the president backed out. Biden quickly signed on to his own town-hall meeting; Trump’s campaign on Wednesday announced its competing event.

Biden did not have any public campaign events scheduled for Wednesday, an unusual move just 20 days before the election, after visiting Florida on Tuesday to court older voters. He was looking to deliver a knockout blow in a state Trump needs to win, while trying to woo a group whose support for the Republican president has slipped.

Trump was in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday, arguably the most important state on the electoral map, unleashing fierce attacks on Biden’s fitness for office in his opponent’s backyard.

Biden’s campaign believes it can win the White House without Florida’s 29 electoral votes, but it wants to lock up the state to pad a margin of victory over Trump, who has questioned the legitimacy of an election where many people will cast mail-in ballots during the pandemic. Biden has vowed to win Pennsylvan­ia, but if he falls short, his path to victory narrows substantia­lly.

The Trump campaign has grown increasing­ly worried about states he won handily four years ago, including Ohio, Iowa and, to a lesser extent, Texas. He all but must win at least one of the three Great Lakes states he flipped red in 2016.

But facing stubborn deficits in Wisconsin and Michigan, the president has placed renewed focus on Pennsylvan­ia and its 20 electoral votes.

Trump will have to run up his margins in the state’s rural areas to win, as his prospects have slipped since 2016 in places like vote-rich suburban Philadelph­ia, where he underperfo­rmed by past Republican measures.

 ?? AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden waves to the crowd at Miramar Regional Park in Miramar, Florida, on Tuesday October 13, 2020.
AP Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden waves to the crowd at Miramar Regional Park in Miramar, Florida, on Tuesday October 13, 2020.
 ?? AP ?? Supporters cheer as President Donald Trump departs a campaign rally in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday.
AP Supporters cheer as President Donald Trump departs a campaign rally in Pennsylvan­ia on Tuesday.

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