The Arizona Republic

Trump’s case for reelection: Fear

Incumbents often offer hope based on record

- Julie Pace

WASHINGTON – As he laid out his case for reelection, President Donald Trump deployed a powerful, and familiar, political tactic: fear.

In a tradition-defying convention address delivered from the White House, Trump painted a grim portrait of violence in American cities run by Democrats and populated by voters who largely oppose him. Though his depictions were at odds with the full reality on the ground in those cities, Trump held himself up as the last best hope for keeping lawlessnes­s from reaching suburban communitie­s — the same communitie­s where he needs to stem the tide of voters turning against the Republican Party.

“Your vote will decide whether we protect law-abiding Americans, or whether we give free rein to violent anarchists, agitators and criminals who threaten our citizens,” Trump declared, adding that the “American way of life” is on the line in his race against Democrat Joe Biden.

Fear has long been wielded by politician­s, in part because it works. Richard Nixon, who ran on a similar “law and order” message when seeking the presidency in 1968, once said: “People react to fear, not love. They don’t teach that in Sunday school, but it’s true.”

Trump embraced that belief during his 2016 campaign, barnstormi­ng the country warning that an influx of immigrants would steal Americans jobs, rape and murder citizens and change the fabric of American society. When he accepted the Republican nomination that year, he painted a dark portrait of America and vowed that “crime and violence that today afflicts our nation will soon come to an end.”

Democrats, too, have deployed fear as a political tactic in the 2020 race, seeking to harness the deep disdain many Americans have for Trump by issuing dire warnings about the consequenc­es of his reelection and the lengths he could go to remain in the White House, including blocking access to voting and not accepting the results if they don’t go his way.

During last week’s Democratic Party convention, former President Barack Obama raised the prospect that Trump would undermine the very tenets of American democracy this fall if that’s what it takes to win.

However, Trump’s embrace of fear as a reelection strategy is notable given that it’s rarely the provenance of incumbent presidents seeking a second term. Having spent nearly four years leading

U.S. government, sitting presidents typically offer up an optimistic vision of the nation’s direction and urge Americans to stay the course, knowing that their political fate is linked to whether voters believe the country is heading in the right direction.

Trump hit some of those notes in his address, touting a criminal justice reform bill his administra­tion championed and tougher tariffs on China aimed at leveling the playing field for American workers. He cast his accomplish­ments in historic, if sometimes inaccurate, terms and proclaimed that he had kept his promises to the American people.

But Trump is also running against historic headwinds, and generating increasing­ly negative reviews from the public for how he has handled the pandemic that has killed more than 180,000 citizens, sending the economy sputtering and unemployme­nt above 10%, and a reckoning over race amid several high-profile killings of Black

Americans, including the shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, last week.

Just 23% of Americans say the country is heading in the right direction, while 75% think it is on the wrong path, according to a recent poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

It’s against that backdrop that Trump has embraced some of those Americans’ fears and worries as his own, leaning hard into the notion that the nation is at risk of being overrun by violent mobs that will burn and loot cities. That’s despite the fact that the protests throughout the country over police brutality against Black Americans have been largely peaceful, though there have been instances of looting and violence.

In Kenosha, for example, Blake’s shooting led to several nights of protests, with some demonstrat­ors destroying buildings and setting fires. Late Tuesday, a 17-year-old from a nearby Illinois community killed two demonstrat­ors, according to authoritie­s.

Trump made no mention of Blake or other Black Americans killed by police during his convention address. Instead, he continued to seize on some of the most unruly imagery from the summer of protests to cast cities as overrun by violence.

He’s also falsely argued that Biden supports efforts to defund police department­s, casting his rival as willing to let violent protests consume the country. Biden has proposed more money for police, conditione­d on improvemen­ts in their practices.

But in Trump’s telling Thursday, “No one will be safe in Biden’s America.”

While Trump’s comments energize his loyal supporters, his real target is Republican-leaning voters who may be eyeing Biden, a more moderate Democrat, as a viable alternativ­e. Timothy Naftali, a presidenti­al historian and professor at New York University, said Trump’s message to those voters is that it’s OK to stick with a candidate they may not like, but see as tough on crime.

“The argument is, he may not be beloved but he’s necessary,” Naftali said. “But he’s only necessary if the consequenc­es of him not being there are apocalypti­c.”

Presidents typically offer up an optimistic vision of the nation’s direction and urge Americans to stay the course.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? With first lady Melania Trump standing by, President Donald Trump accepts the Republican nomination outside the White House on Thursday.
EVAN VUCCI/AP With first lady Melania Trump standing by, President Donald Trump accepts the Republican nomination outside the White House on Thursday.

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