Boston Herald

Trump going off same old script

Challenge is keeping his act fresh during election year

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WASHINGTON — The Donald Trump show has a consistent script. Same villains. Same nicknames. Same grievances. Same hero: himself.

At raucous rallies held mostly in states that are friendly to him, the president tells audiences that he could be presidenti­al, even Lincolnesq­ue, if he wanted to. But that, he says, would be boring.

“It’s easy to be presidenti­al but only have about three people in front of me,” Trump said at a recent rally, before breaking into a monotone imitation of a droning politician. “Doing this takes far more talent than doing that. Doing that is very easy. This is not easy.”

As he seeks re-election with little variance from the themes that brought him to power four years ago, a central challenge will be to keep those audiences satisfied and to make sure, like a great entertaine­r, that the act isn’t getting stale.

The president retains robust approval ratings among Republican­s but even that fealty will be tested as he asks voters for another four years essentiall­y offering them not new promises but more of the same.

Trump’s campaign remains highly confident it will not only retain those who backed the president in 2016, but will also expand the electorate by turning out people who did not vote four years ago, in addition to peeling off some African American and Latino males.

At a rally last week in South Carolina, nearly 29% of those who registered for tickets didn’t vote in the 2016 election, according to Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale.

But there are other metrics that don’t look quite as hopeful.

Trump’s Twitter following has grown to more than 73 million, up from 25 million at the start of his presidency. But the public’s engagement with the president on his favorite social media platform has diminished since his inaugurati­on more than three years ago.

Trump broke his personal record for most tweets or retweets in a day in January as the Senate began hearing opening arguments in his impeachmen­t trial, sending out more than 140 posts before most Americans had left work for the day. Trump, who was in Switzerlan­d for an economic forum at the time, mostly posted tweets and retweets attacking Democratic House impeachmen­t managers while amplifying messaging from allies who came to his defense.

Brian Ott, a Texas Tech University professor of communicat­ions and co-author of “The Twitter Presidency: Donald J. Trump and the Politics of White Rage,” says that Trump’s Twitter following has naturally expanded beyond his fervent supporters and political watchers because of his standing as the world’s most powerful leader.

But his hardcore fans don’t get the same thrill from retweeting and commenting on Trump’s every post, and Russian trolls who were active on social media ahead of the 2016 election have less incentive, at the moment, to interfere and have melted away, Ott said.

Trump’s campaign speeches have also become longer, according to Factbase.

In 2017, his campaign speeches averaged 59 minutes. Thus far in 2020, he’s clocking in at an average of 80.7 minutes.

“An overwhelmi­ng percentage of his discourse is about attacking others, and he simply has more enemies now,” said Ott, explaining why Trump’s speeches may be getting longer. “He uses the campaign rallies to air grievances and he’s just got more grievances at this point and never lets go of anything.”

 ??  ?? BACK AT IT: President Trump makes a joke as he speaks during a campaign rally Monday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, N.C.
BACK AT IT: President Trump makes a joke as he speaks during a campaign rally Monday at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, N.C.

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