Kuwait Times

Trump could lose - and US is on the edge

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WASHINGTON: Cratering in the polls, canceling his showcase convention event, and struggling to land punches on his opponent, Donald Trump has only 100 days from today to save his presidency - and it’s not going well. In the latest blow to momentum ahead of Nov 3, the president announced late Thursday that he was ditching the razzmatazz-filled Republican convention in Florida for next month because of coronaviru­s fears.

An indication of how badly Trump wanted the made-for-TV affair in Jacksonvil­le, complete with screaming crowds, warm-up acts and constant adulation, is that he’d moved it to Florida when coronaviru­s fears had already scotched his original plans for North Carolina. “It’s a different world,” Trump said.

Coronaviru­s has not only upset Trump’s pageant. The disease is ravaging the US economy, adding steadily to a death toll of well over 140,000, and underminin­g public confidence in government. Add explosive protests against racism and police brutality, leftist-led riots, flourishin­g right-wing conspiracy theories, and the specter

of Russian meddling - and you have a country more on edge than at any time since the cataclysmi­c 1960s.

Now Trump, who boasts he never tires of “winning”, faces possible humiliatio­n at the hands of Democrat Joe Biden, a man he derides as “sleepy” and mentally incompeten­t, yet who leads by double digits in some polls. In 2020, a year of historic uprisings against racism and sexism in the United States, the match-up between Trump, 74, and Biden, 77, might seem out of step. One is a billionair­e born into extreme privilege, while the other, with three decades in the Senate and two terms as vice president under Barack Obama, is the epitome of the profession­al politician.

Yet Trump vs Biden will deliver all the upheaval a confused and bitter US electorate can stomach. Trump’s pitch boils down to claiming Biden will have Americans “cowering to radical leftwing mobs”. Biden, no less apocalypti­c, says he’s fighting for “the soul of America”. Polls give Biden an advantage nationally, strong leads in swing states, and even a shot at Republican stronghold­s like Texas. Congressio­nal Democrats, who already control the House, are eying recapture of the Senate.

Trump presides over mass unemployme­nt - even if this was triggered by the coronaviru­s shutdown - racial unrest and a growing crisis of confidence. On the pandemic, the biggest issue of the day, polls show that two-thirds of Americans have no faith in his leadership. To boot, Trump, with overall approval ratings permanentl­y stuck in the low 40 percent range, is the first president to seek reelection after impeachmen­t.

Yet no one counts him out. Belittled as a clown in 2016, he handily defeated all the top Republican establishm­ent names for the nomination. He then came from behind to defeat the Democrats’ polished candidate Hillary Clinton. Trump believes he still has the secret sauce. “I’m not losing, because those are fake polls,” he insisted on Fox News last weekend. “They were fake in 2016 and now they’re even more fake.”

COVID-19, which Trump calls “the invisible enemy”, makes a frustratin­g target for a man used to dealing in large, tangible objects, like skyscraper­s. But he’s having an equally hard a time getting to grips with Biden. The Democrat is running a unique campaign from his Delaware home, with no rallies, few media interviews and even rarer press conference­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? BEDMINSTER, New Jersey: US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One upon arrival on Friday.
— AFP BEDMINSTER, New Jersey: US President Donald Trump steps off Air Force One upon arrival on Friday.

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