The Arizona Republic

Trump facing skepticism in suburbs

Convention designed to hold base, not enlarge it

- Thomas Beaumont, Aamer Madhani and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON – Pat Newell backed Donald Trump in 2016.

But after Trump’s speech at the Republican National Convention last week included no mention of the police shooting of Jacob Blake that spurred demonstrat­ions in her hometown of Kenosha, Wisconsin, the white retired public relations specialist said the president still had work to do before she’ll commit to voting for him again in November.

“He simply ignored it,” said Newell, 71, a reliable Republican voter who has also been put off by aspects of Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic but approves of his stewardshi­p of the economy. “That’s so bothersome.”

The president can ill afford to lose voters like Newell. His convention underscore­d the campaign’s conviction that Trump’s path to reelection rests primarily on voters who backed him four years ago.

Republican strategist­s and Trump backers offered mixed reviews of whether the strategy will right a campaign that has been set back by his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the resulting economic collapse as well as his response to unrest this summer spurred by high-profile cases of police brutality against Black men and women, including last week’s shooting in Wisconsin.

Looking to stanch eroding support among suburban women and waffling supporters put off by his style, Trump sought to make the case he alone has what it takes to maintain law and order and steer the nation out of public health and economic crises. He spent nearly as much energy branding his Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, as a Trojan horse being used by the radical left.

The GOP convention’s target audience, according to campaign officials, was mostly former Trump supporters, those Republican­s or independen­ts who may have backed him in 2016 but grew unhappy with his rhetoric or handling of the pandemic. The goal, by trying to humanize Trump and demonize Biden, was to set up a permission structure to

make those voters feel comfortabl­e enough to vote for Trump again, even if they cared for his policies far more than his personalit­y.

Officials believe they accomplish­ed that over the four-day convention and are encouraged by internal numbers that show Trump had begun closing the gap on Biden even before the events of this week in Washington.

Tina Giza, who waited hours to see Trump in New Hampshire at his first post-convention rally on Friday, was full of praise for the RNC.

“He had so many different speakers from all sectors and experience­s, talking about all the things he’s done for different groups, different ethnic groups. It was just awesome,” said Giza, 64, a retired nurse from Connecticu­t. “It was very uplifting, very positive. It made me feel really good watching it.”

The president’s advisers privately acknowledg­e minefields lay ahead in the final nine weeks before Election Day.

Trump aides are warily watching the calendar as Labor Day approaches, con

cerned that the three-day weekend, traditiona­lly marked by parties and sizable gatherings, could trigger a spike in infections just like they believe Memorial Day did at the other bookend of summer, according to three White House and campaign officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

Even without another surge in coronaviru­s deaths and infections, some Trump backers say he needs to do more to unite a fractured nation.

“He’s obtuse, and he doesn’t get it,” said Lee Davis, who watched parts of the convention from Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, a Republican-leaning exurb of Milwaukee. “But I don’t think he’s a racist. I just think he’s incapable of moving comfortabl­y to talking about race. It’s one of the many things he handles poorly because he’s nihilist.”

The 55-year-old white insurance underwrite­r is exactly the sort of voter that Trump is relying on as he tries to repeat his success in battlegrou­nds like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvan­ia – states where he narrowly won in 2016 but polls show he faces a difficult fight.

In the half-ring of suburban and exurban counties around Milwaukee, where Trump won but underperfo­rmed by historic GOP standards in 2016, Trump likely will need to improve his margins. Democrats made gains in swing-voting rural areas in Wisconsin far from the metro area in the 2018 midterms and 2020 special elections.

The convention programmin­g included fiery speeches by the president’s personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, to warn of greater chaos in the streets should Biden win, endorsemen­ts from law enforcemen­t officials and an emotional address from the widow of a retired St. Louis police officer who was killed this summer while helping a friend whose shop had been broken into during the unrest that was affecting many cities.

Trump barely addressed broader issues of police brutality and racial injustice during a speech Thursday that spanned more than an hour, saying simply, “We will ensure equal justice for citizens of every race, religion, color and creed.”

During the convention, Trump surrogates sought to soften his image with women by highlighti­ng some of his female administra­tion officials and concern for them outside the job.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany recalled how Trump and first lady Melania Trump checked in on her after she went through a preventive surgery to avoid developing breast cancer. Kellyanne Conway, his outgoing senior adviser, applauded Trump for handing her the reins for the closing of the 2016 campaign – making her the first woman to manage a winning presidenti­al campaign.

Trump’s daughter and senior adviser Ivanka Trump spotlighte­d that 70% of new jobs created went to women in 2019 and described him as a doting grandfathe­r. She also acknowledg­ed Trump’s use of social media – he regularly uses the platform to put political opponents, businesses and cultural figures who are at odds with him on blast – isn’t for everyone.

“I know his tweets can feel a bit ... unfiltered,” said Ivanka Trump in introducin­g the president before his acceptance speech. “But the results speak for themselves.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? The Republican National Convention seemed designed to hold President Donald Trump’s base, not to reach out for converts.
EVAN VUCCI/AP The Republican National Convention seemed designed to hold President Donald Trump’s base, not to reach out for converts.

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