Marin Independent Journal

Trump swagger belies bleakness inside campaign

- By Maggie Haberman and Alexander Burns

In public, President Donald Trump and his campaign team project a sense of optimism and bravado. When they meet with Republican donors and state party leaders, presidenti­al aides insist they are fully capable of achieving a close victory over Joe Biden on Nov. 3.

On television and in campaign appearance­s, Trump and his children dismiss public polls that suggest that his prospects are bleak. The president’s calendar of events is packed through Election Day, with aides predicting a thrice-aday rally schedule in the final weeks of the race. When Trump contemplat­es the prospect of defeat, he does so in a tone of denial and disbelief.

“Could you imagine if I lose?” he asked a crowd Friday.

In private, most members of Trump’s team acknowledg­e that is not a far-fetched possibilit­y.

Away from their candidate and the television cameras, some of Trump’s aides are quietly conceding just how dire his political predicamen­t

appears to be, and his inner circle has returned to a state of recriminat­ions and backbiting. Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, is drawing furious blame from the president and some political advisers for his handling of Trump’s recent hospitaliz­ation, and he is seen as unlikely to hold onto his job past Election Day.

Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, has maintained to senior Republican­s that the president has a path forward in the race but at times has conceded it is narrow.

Some midlevel aides on the campaign have even begun inquiring about employment on Capitol Hill after the election, apparently under the assumption that there will not be a second Trump administra­tion for them to serve in. (It is not clear how appealing the Trump campaign might be as a resume line for privatesec­tor employers).

Less than three weeks before Election Day, there is now an extraordin­ary gulf separating Trump’s experience of the campaign from the more sobering political assessment­s of a number of party officials and operatives, according to interviews with nearly a dozen Republican strategist­s, White House allies and elected officials. Among some of Trump’s lieutenant­s, there is an attitude of grit mixed with resignatio­n: a sense that the best they can do for the final stretch is to keep the president occupied, happy and off Twitter as much as possible, rather than producing a major shift in strategy.

Often, their biggest obstacle is Trump himself.

Instead of delivering a focused closing message aimed at changing people’s perception­s about his handling of the coronaviru­s, or making a case for why he can revive the economy better than Biden can, Trump is spending the remaining

days on a familiar mix of personal grievances, attacks on his opponents and obfuscatio­ns. He has portrayed himself as a victim, dodged questions about his own coronaviru­s testing, attacked his attorney general and the FBI director and equivocate­d on the benefits of mask-wearing.

Rather than drawing a consistent contrast with Biden on the economy, strategist­s say, the president’s preference is to attack Biden’s son Hunter over his business dealings and to hurl personal insults like “Sleepy Joe” against a candidate whose favorabili­ty ratings are much higher than Trump’s.

“A lot of Republican consultant­s are frustrated because we want the president’s campaign to be laser-focused on the economy,” said David Kochel, a Republican strategist in Iowa. “Their best message is: Trump built a great economy” and COVID-19 damaged it, and Trump is a better option than Biden to restore it, he said.

“Our base loves the stuff about Hunter Biden, laptops and Mayor Giuliani,” Kochel added. “But they’re already voting for Trump.”

Before Trump’s upset win in 2016, his campaign also mixed public boasting with private anxiety about the apparent likelihood of defeat.

But then, unlike now, Trump closed the race with a jackhammer message attacking Hillary Clinton as a corrupt insider and promising sweeping economic changes an argument far clearer than what he is offering today.

Stepien and other campaign leaders, including Jason Miller, a senior strategist, have stressed to Republican­s in Washington that they expect to outperform the public polls. They say their own data suggests a closer race in a number of states, including Arizona and Pennsylvan­ia, than surveys conducted by news organizati­ons. They are wagering that voter registrati­on and the turnout machinery that Trump’s team has built over the past four years will ultimately give them an edge in narrowly divided states on Election Day.

Still, some prominent Republican­s have noted in newly direct language the possibilit­y and even the likelihood of defeat for the president. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a close ally, said this past week that Democrats had “a good chance of winning the White House,” while Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska said his party might be facing a “blood bath.”

In some respects, the trajectory of Trump’s campaign

in its final weeks reflects long-standing structural weaknesses and internal divisions.

From the start, the campaign has never had a dominant strategist that role has always been played by a president with a dim view of the political profession­al class. In an interview in July with The New York Times, Jared Kushner, a White House adviser and the president’s son-in-law, was candid about who was in charge of the 2020 race: Trump, he said, was “really the campaign manager at the end of the day.”

Trump’s first campaign manager, Brad Parscale, focused heavily on building online infrastruc­ture and using it to raise money, while Kushner oversaw his work.

Stepien, who replaced Parscale in July, is regarded in Washington as a capable nuts- and- bolts tactician. But with a small window of time left before the election, he has not attempted to redraw Trump’s playbook.

For much of the past four years, Kushner had cast himself as the chief executive of the reelection effort, but he pulled back from that role during the summer and in September, when the political environmen­t had clearly soured. Instead, he thrust himself into a number of diplomatic negotiatio­ns in the Middle East that have little evident salience in the election. He has become more engaged in recent weeks, officials said.

Trump’s advisers have not given up hope for a reversal in fortune. Facing a financial crunch, his campaign appears to be concentrat­ing its advertisin­g on a handful of states that provide a slim route to an Electoral College victory: the Sun Belt battlegrou­nds of Florida, Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina, as well as Pennsylvan­ia, the largest Northern swing state, according to data from the media tracking firm Advertisin­g Analytics. Trump’s travel last week and in the coming days is largely mirroring those priorities.

The campaign has made larger advertisin­g reservatio­ns starting next week in states like Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ohio and Iowa, although it has frequently adjusted or canceled bookings as their start dates have approached.

Trump, in the meantime, is discussing diversions from his own schedule to help people he cares about personally; for instance, he is likely to schedule an event with Graham. Although the trip would overlap with a North Carolina media market, and is personally pleasing to Trump, it would do little to help his own electoral map.

It is that kind of distractio­n that has frustratio­ns mounting on Capitol Hill and even within the West Wing, over what many Republican­s regard as a wasted October so far, including the decision to spurn a second debate.

“The reality is they are probably out of time,” said Rob Stutzman, a California­based Republican strategist. “They desperatel­y needed the debate to have a larger audience and to have an opportunit­y to provide some kind of contrast that would change the race trajectory, meaning a different Trump or an opportunit­y for a Biden gaffe. That was their best hope for a Hail Mary.”

 ?? DOUG MILLS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Trump campaigns Saturday in Janesville, Wis. His campaign has made larger advertisin­g reservatio­ns starting next week inWisconsi­n, Minnesota, Ohio and Iowa.
DOUG MILLS — THE NEW YORK TIMES President Trump campaigns Saturday in Janesville, Wis. His campaign has made larger advertisin­g reservatio­ns starting next week inWisconsi­n, Minnesota, Ohio and Iowa.

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