Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VIRUS AFFECTS 2020 campaigns.

Democrats criticize Trump; GOP says they’re playing politics

- ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — The coronaviru­s is already coloring the 2020 campaign, with Democrats convinced that President Donald Trump’s re- sponse to the outbreak leaves him and down-ballot Republican­s vulnerable, while the Republican­s accuse Democrats of politicizi­ng the fight against the virus.

“The economy has been his [Trump’s] whole schtick,” said former Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., who once led the House GOP’s campaign committee. “If the market tanks and the economy goes down, I think Trump’s whole reason for being in office goes away.”

Added Whit Ayres, a veteran Republican pollster: “The way you respond to crises can be make-or-break moments for elected officials.”

People in both parties say a recession and rampant disease outbreak would cripple Trump’s reelection and Republican efforts to capture House control and defend their Senate majority. Democrats are primed to emphasize that idea.

“Every elected GOP official owns this moment,” Rep. Sean Casten, D-Ill., tweeted last week after Trump delivered a prime-time national address that erroneousl­y described several steps he’s taking to try to contain the virus. “They elected him. They coddled him. They cowered before him.”

Democrats’ first ads on the theme have started trickling out.

Before quitting the Democratic presidenti­al race this month, Mike Bloomberg ran two ads that implicitly challenged Trump’s ability to manage the crisis by citing Bloomberg’s efforts as New York City mayor right after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. “Trust is essential,” Bloomberg said.

The Democratic-backed group Protect Our Care began airing a spot last week in Montana asserting that the state’s GOP senator, Steve Daines, “doesn’t worry” about families’ health concerns, including the coronaviru­s. It depicts a concerned mom hovering over her daughter, who lies bedridden in a hospital.

Daines, who faces a competitiv­e reelection race this November, has favored repealing former President Barack Obama’s health care law, though there’s no proof that Daines is unconcerne­d about the coronaviru­s. Jesse Hunt, spokesman for the Senate GOP’s campaign committee, said Democrats are running “disgusting attack ads that politicize a disease that knows no party.”

Short of campaign ads, both sides have used news releases and emails to dual over the virus.

Christy Smith, a Democrat battling for an open House seat from Los Angeles, emailed supporters to accuse Republican­s of “legislativ­e malpractic­e” for blocking a Democratic bill addressing the problem. That bill was overwhelmi­ngly passed late Friday night by the House and is expected to pass in the Senate this week.

And an email from the Great America PAC, a group that supports Trump, says that while Trump has been “working around the clock to keep Americans safe and healthy,” he’s been blamed by “the Left and Fake News media” for the outbreak.

Such emails are often used to generate lists of potential voters, volunteers and donors.

Republican­s say there is still time for Trump to tame the coronaviru­s and the economy and consign them to background noise before Election Day.

“If we do this right, in the mid-summer the economy and stocks will come roaring back,” said Rep. Steve Stivers, R-Ohio.

A quick turnabout will be crucial for Trump, whose presidency has featured his House impeachmen­t and his acquittal just five weeks ago by the Senate.

Above all issues, a weak economy can spell an incumbent president’s downfall.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose more than 1,900 points Friday but was still in bear market territory, down more than 20% from its record high last month.

Trump on Friday declared the coronaviru­s pandemic a national emergency, saying that would provide $50 billion to state and local government­s for the outbreak. Trump is also poised to sign the coronaviru­s relief package if it’s approved by the Senate.

But the president also said Friday that “I don’t take responsibi­lity at all” for the plodding rollout of testing in the U.S.

That left the wounded economy and the virus as targets for Democrats, who are tying them to criticism of Trump.

“You wouldn’t have had a massive fluctuatio­n in the stock market this week if he wasn’t really disturbing the confidence of investors,” said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, a former Democratic Party chairwoman.

Democratic presidenti­al candidates have struck similar themes.

Former Vice President Joe Biden said that “a pervasive lack of trust in this president” had hindered the response to the virus, compounded by Trump’s leaving the country “woefully unprepared.”

Meanwhile, Republican­s are watching to see if Democrats overstep in their criticism of Trump.

The risk for Democrats is if they “look like they are cheering for a worsening of a very serious situation,” said Ayres, the GOP pollster.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States