Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Will Trump’s virus shift re-ignite campaign?

Constant missteps reinforce feelings of incompeten­ce

- By Adam Nagourney The New York Times

For months, President Donald Trump belittled Joe Biden as an opponent cowering in the basement inamaskash­esoughtto dismiss the seriousnes­s of a pandemic threatenin­g the nation’s health — and his re-election prospects.

But with his sudden embrace of masks and the canceling of the Republican National Convention in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., on Thursday, Trump has reluctantl­y conceded to the reality of a political landscape that has been transforme­d by disease and fear. A pandemic that once struck Democratic states like New York and California has moved with alarming force into red America and helped to recast his contest with Biden, his presumptiv­e Democratic opponent.

Trump’s attempt to downplay the coronaviru­s or deride it as a threat exaggerate­d by his Democratic opponents and the media has met the reality of rising caseloads, death counts and overwhelme­d intensive care units in places like Texas, Arizona, Georgia and Florida, all states that he won in 2016 and that the Biden campaign had until now viewed as long shots.

The president’s handling of the virus is shaping up as not only a policy failure but also a political one. Rather than strengthen­ing his position against Biden, Trump’s response to the virus appears to have created a backlash among voters — one that has only elevated his opponent.

“The movement of COVID into the South and West has finally caught up with Trump,” said Linda Fowler, a professor of government at Dartmouth College. “While the disease was decimating blue states, he was able to pretend it wasn’t happening. But now the context has changed considerab­ly, and his people are hurting, underscore­d by the sinking poll numbers, the problems for GOP congressio­nal candidates and the fact that the party faithful was reluctant to attend the convention.”

The political perils of Trump’s course were driven home a few hours before he announced he was scrapping the Florida convention. A Quinnipiac poll found that Biden was now leading Trump in Florida by 13 percentage points, a stunning margin in a state that has become — since the recount in the 2000 presidenti­al election between Al Gore and George W. Bush — Exhibit A of a nation where elections are decided by decimal points.

National and battlegrou­nd state polls over the past two weeks suggest how much Trump is out of step with the nation on the pandemic, in contrast with Biden. Most Americans support the use of masks and are apprehensi­ve about students returning to school or the reopening of cities. And they have lost confidence in the president’s ability — or willingnes­s — to steer the country out of a crisis, to the decided advantage of Biden.

A Washington POST-ABC News poll this past week found that Americans trusted Biden over Trump to handle the COVID-19 crisis by a double-digit margin, 54 percent to 34 percent. With the election less than four months away and with no evidence that Biden was being hurt by campaignin­g in a mask and supporting tough measures to contain the virus, Trump had little choice but to at least try to change course.

“He’s wearing a mask and canceling the convention,” said Mark Mckinnon, who was in charge of advertisin­g for Bush’s reelection campaign in 2004. “That’s a head-snapping reversal for a guy who hates to be wrong, hates to back down and, worst of all, hates to be perceived as weak.”

The canceling of the Florida convention would appear, for now, to also play to the Democrats’ advantage. Biden and his aides no longer have to worry that his scaleddown virtual acceptance speech would look small and silly next to a fullblown speech by Trump, as Republican­s had once hoped.

And the Democrats cut back their convention methodical­ly and with no drama and little notice, calibratin­g to the worsening pandemic and to the cautions of medical profession­als against large gatherings. By contrast, Trump and his party stumbled into this decision, a long and messy process that included a last-minute switch of the convention to Florida from North Carolina.

The chaos surroundin­g the convention planning mirrored the chaos that surrounded decision-making on many issues in the White House, including COVID-19. Trump announced the cancellati­on at the start of his Thursday coronaviru­s briefing, with no real plan about what, if anything, the Republican­s would do in its stead.

“The Republican­s now have a month to put together a remote convention, and the Democrats had a three-month head start,” Fowler said. ”And they have wasted a lot of money. It sort of reinforces the competence problems that this administra­tion has been dealing with.”

Trump, who has long been a master of imagery, had been hoping to draw a contrast with Biden, downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of the virus as he pushed to open cities, hold big rallies and gather for convention­s like the one he wanted in Jacksonvil­le. His stance recalled the long history of Republican­s portraying themselves as unbending, resilient and self-sufficient — the purported party of strength. (It recalled the swagger with which Trump approached his real estate dealings when he was a New York developer.)

“The Trump strategy was to campaign as the strong man,” Mckinnon said. While Biden was hidden “in a mask in a basement, he would be stepping maskless into adoring crowds at a packed convention.”

But over the past two weeks, mask requiremen­ts have been imposed at Walmart, Target, CVS and Mcdonald’s. Mitch Mcconnell, the Republican leader of the Senate, started showing up in the Capitol wearing a mask. These days, it is a maskless Trump who looks the outlier — not Biden showing up at a campaign event with a piece of black cloth draped over his mouth.

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 ?? Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump has recently changed course in his campaign, embracing masks and canceling the Republican National Convention in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.
Sue Ogrocki / Associated Press President Donald Trump has recently changed course in his campaign, embracing masks and canceling the Republican National Convention in Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

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