Morning Sun

Trump is trailing in the polls, but his voters still love his chances

- Gary Abernathy Abernathy is a freelance writer based in Hillsboro, Ohio.

Not all the Trump-pence campaign signs dotting the landscape carry familiar slogans like “Make America Great Again,” “Keep America Great” or “Promises Kept.” An increasing number cut right to the chase, declaring, in the kind of off-color language often employed by the president himself, “Trump 2020: Nomore bull----.”

The exact nature of the b.s. in question no doubt differs in themind of each voter. It might boil down to annoyance over political correctnes­s run amok, or disrespect shown to “flag and country” by athletes and others kneeling during the national anthem, or protests in cities that often morphed into violence and destructio­n, or freedom-crushing restrictio­nsmasquera­ding as coronaviru­s mandates or, most recently, the notion that Trump should ignore his duty to nominate a justice to fill a Supreme Court vacancy.

For others, “b.s.” might simply reflect the inordinate amount of attention devoted to feelings and emotions, as opposed to tangible actions and accomplish­ments. That Democratic nominee Joe Biden is a more empathetic character than Trump is a stipulated fact, apparently important tomany pundits and reporters but irrelevant to the average Trump supporter.

Trump voters long ago tuned out convention­al wisdomfrom­mainstream­media voices. From the start, the daily drumbeat of negativity about this president quickly reached, to them, comical proportion­s. They are not surprised that, as the home stretch of the 2020 election arrives, there is a fullblown avalanche of anti-trump books and revelation­s bolstered by wall-to-wall media coverage, perfectly timed for maximum Trumpbashi­ng impact.

Trump famously said he could shoot someone and not lose support, which was not true when he said it, butmight be now. If it transpired tomorrow, the reporting on it would blend into the woodwork of every Trump story over the past four years that was recklessly overhyped, of which there were far toomany. If those journalist­s who have let Trump get under their skin were honest, they would admit democracy has been ill-served as a result of their own blindness toward their duty to be fair and detached, even in covering those they despise and who despise them.

Still, despite prepostero­usly negative press coverage and subsequent bad poll numbers, it’s interestin­g to hear, in casual conversati­on, the degree to which Trump’s supporters share a serene assurance that theirman will be reelected. “I don’t believe the polls,” one longtime GOP activist told me lastweek. “It’s going to be just like four years ago.”

Trump voters have no doubt that they are again being underappre­ciated in themedia and underrepre­sented in surveys. But another reason is their confidence that every last Trump supporter inamerica will vote, come hell, high water or COVID-19.

Among the easiest jobs in the political world must be serving as

Get-out-the-vote (GOTV) director for the Trump campaign. In most cases, GOTV directors — be they Republican or Democrat — spend fitful days and nights devising sophistica­tedways to drive every last sympatheti­c voter to the polls. Trump voters need no artificial stimulatio­n.

Take the recent “rolling rallies,” impressive collection­s of Trump voters taking to the nation’s highways to fly their flags for the president. The events are publicized mostly on social media and by word of mouth. This month, more than 6,000 people signed up to participat­e inamotorca­de celebratin­g Trump that circled Cincinnati’s I-275 beltway for as far as the eye could see. Rally participan­t Judie Howard explained her dedication in terms of what she owed Trump. “He was chosen by God for us,” she said, adding that riding in the rally is “the least we can do.” Similar rallies have been held across the nation. It’s hard to imagine Biden inspiring comparable levels of grass-roots enthusiasm.

But while passion is important

— and Trump’s supporters are arguablymo­re zealous than those of any candidate in modern history — it doesn’t guarantee that when the votes are tabulated, the president’s legionswon’t be outnumbere­d by a combinatio­n of Democrats, Never-trump Republican­s and independen­ts who desperatel­y want anyone but Trump in the Oval Office. While Biden doesn’t personally generatemu­ch passion, he will benefit from Trump haters everywhere, who collective­ly are a fervent lot.

For Trump voters, though, a Biden victory is inconceiva­ble. Trump is the only plain talker preventing political correctnes­s from overwhelmi­ng their lives; the bulwark against old-fashioned, flagsaluti­ng patriotism­vanishing into history; the firewall against Big Brother imposing overly restrictiv­emandates on healthy Americans in the name of safety and security.

In short, Trump is the only thing standing between themand a bleak future of entrenched, irreversib­le, institutio­nal b.s. It’s all the motivation they need.

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