Los Angeles Times

A closing argument heavy on pleas, insults

Trump begs suburban women, ‘ Please like me,’ and alienates allies as he trails in polls

- By Eli Stokols and Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — Sinking in the polls, strapped for cash and facing a potential tidal wave of early Democratic voting as coronaviru­s cases have soared, President Trump has found new culprits to blame for his political woes — his own supporters, Cabinet members and even fellow Republican leaders.

In appearance­s this week, he has vented his frustratio­ns with suburban women — a critical voting bloc that polls suggest he has lost to Democratic nominee Joe Biden — mixing an uncharacte­ristic personal plea with raw resentment and a curious claim of achievemen­t.

“Suburban women, will you please like me? I saved your damn neighborho­od, OK?” he said at a rally in Johnstown, Pa.

In Des Moines, he jabbed at Iowa farmers, who were battered by his trade war with China, saying they apparently prefer government

handouts to “working their asses off.”

At a town hall in Miami, he refused to disavow a farright conspiracy- mongering group that falsely alleges a cabal of Satan- worshiping pedophiles is trying to take over the government. He also falsely claimed that the nation is “turning the corner” on the COVID- 19 pandemic on a day when new infections and hospitaliz­ations rose to their highest levels since April.

And on Friday, in a pitch to older voters at an indoor event in Fort Myers, Fla., Trump reiterated his ageist attacks on Biden, saying the 77- year- old former vice president is “gone,” and warned Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, seated nearby, that any delay in developing a COVID- 19 vaccine would be his fault.

“We’re counting on you,” he told Azar, then turned to the audience and said: “I’m going to blame him if this stuff doesn’t happen fast.”

Trump also attacked a Republican senator who is in a difficult reelection f ight and whose seat could determine whether the party continues to control the Senate next year.

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine was “not worth the work,” he tweeted, citing a “nasty rumor out there” that she would not vote to confirm conservati­ve jurist Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. A Senate Judiciary Committee vote is scheduled for Thursday.

It wasn’t a rumor. Collins has said publicly that she would not vote to confirm a nominee this close to an election. Moreover, Republican­s are desperate to hold her seat in the Senate, but with a 53- 47 majority, they do not need her vote to confirm Barrett to the high court.

Collins was the deciding vote for Brett M. Kavanaugh, another of Trump’s Supreme Court nominees, in 2018. The decision contribute­d to an erosion of support for Collins, especially among women, in Maine.

Long before he was president, Trump was known for lashing out at close aides and business associates and even his own children, blaming and denigratin­g others while refusing to admit his own failings or faults.

Now with 17 days until election day, and over 20 million ballots already cast in record early voting, Trump’s anger and frustratio­n is spilling into the open in ways unusual even for him.

“Trump is completely unhinged at the moment, knowing deep down that he is going to lose this election and possibly by a landslide,” said Michael Cohen, Trump’s former longtime lawyer and confidant, who became a f ierce critic after being convicted of lying to the Senate about Trump’s business interests in Russia.

“Trump cares for no one or anything other than himself,” Cohen said. “His supporters are only valuable to him if they vote for him at the polls.”

Four years after Trump leveraged Hillary Clinton’s descriptio­n of his base as “deplorable­s” and successful­ly fused his own grievances with theirs, his final pitch to voters this time is far less clear, dwelling more on his own frustratio­ns and fears

than the electorate’s.

“The dynamic is so much different than 2016, which was sort of a fanciful quest for the presidency,” said Michael D’Antonio, a Trump biographer. “Now he just has so much more to lose. He faces the prospect of not only shame and humiliatio­n but also prosecutio­n, and I think that’s terrifying to him in a way that nothing has been before.”

Trump has struggled to articulate a second- term agenda, and polls show he has failed to convince Americans that he has shown leadership or proved trustworth­y during a pandemic that has killed over 218,000 Americans this year.

Barbara Res, a longtime Trump Organizati­on executive who has just written a book about her 18 years working for him, said the only thing new about Trump’s long- held contempt for working- class people is that it’s spilling into public view.

“His world is personal

drivers, exclusive clubs, private planes, and parties. But without the MAGA hatwearing white male, he has no political career,” Res writes in “Tower of Lies.” “So he created this charade. Friend to the common man? Give me a break. Trump can’t stand the common man.”

Sen. Ben Sasse ( R- Neb.) let loose his deep frustratio­n with Trump in a private phone call with donors this week that his office has since confirmed. Speaking of a key pillar in Trump’s conservati­ve base, Sasse said the president “mocks evangelica­ls behind closed doors.”

During Trump’s rally Tuesday in Iowa, a state that months ago looked like a slam dunk for the president but is now a neck- and- neck race with Biden, Trump expressed nervousnes­s about the state of play, urging supporters to “get the hell out to vote” and saying he would never return if he loses.

“I may never have to

come back here again if I don’t get Iowa,” he said. “I’ll never be back.”

He also suggested that Iowa farmers, who have been unable to sell their products overseas because of his titfor- tat trade war with China, were happy to rely on the bailouts his administra­tion authorized and were secretly relieved not to work as hard.

“I shouldn’t tell you this because they don’t like this, but some of the farmers were making more money the way that Iowa was doing than by working their asses off, all right?” Trump said. “They were very, very happy.”

He also complained that TV news coverage paid more attention to the derecho storms that destroyed hundreds of thousands of acres of crops in Iowa in August than to his nomination for a Nobel prize that he didn’t win.

For Trump’s strongest supporters, his blunt statements show his rough- hewn outsider’s persona and allow

them the sense of a shared joke at the expense of elites, the media and other foils.

But Trump’s travel schedule — he won Iowa by over 9 percentage points in 2016, for example — shows how the joke has grown old with others. Polls show a majority in Iowa disapprove of his handling of the pandemic.

On Friday night he campaigned in Georgia, a state he won by over 5 points in 2016 and that has not voted for a Democrat for president since 1992. Recent polls there show Biden ahead.

Trump “has always been a transactio­nal f igure,” said Amanda Carpenter, a former aide to Sen. Ted Cruz ( R- Texas) and a critic of the president. “He’s going through the various demographi­cs he’s doing poorly with and saying, ‘ I gave you this; now you owe me a vote.’

“He expects: ‘ I was loyal to you, now you be loyal to me,’ ” she added. “But people’s lives have been crushed.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP talks with voters Thursday after NBC’s town hall in Miami. His frustratio­n at the state of the race is starting to show in public.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP talks with voters Thursday after NBC’s town hall in Miami. His frustratio­n at the state of the race is starting to show in public.
 ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP John Bazemore Associated Press ?? speaks at a rally Friday in Macon, Ga. He has recently lashed out at key voter blocs, aides and longtime allies.
PRESIDENT TRUMP John Bazemore Associated Press speaks at a rally Friday in Macon, Ga. He has recently lashed out at key voter blocs, aides and longtime allies.

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