The News-Times

Pandemic overwhelms Trump’s message in critical N.C.

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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — President Donald Trump is fighting to fill a Supreme Court vacancy, howling with unsubstant­iated claims of voter fraud and warning that violent mobs are infiltrati­ng the suburbs.

But on a recent morning along Arbor Street, a peaceful tree-lined road with stately brick Colonials and Tudors near Winston-Salem, the women who are the targets of Trump’s messages were confrontin­g much more tangible threats.

As conservati­ve activists canvassed the neighborho­od, one young mother, a baby in her arms, shouted through a closed window that she was in quarantine. Across the street, another was focused on teaching her children their daily lessons at the kitchen table.

And a few doors down, 49-year-old Christina Donnell, an independen­t who voted for Trump four years ago, said through a black face mask that Trump’s “terrible” handling of the pandemic and divisive leadership more broadly are her chief concerns.

“It’s embarrassi­ng to the country,“Donnell, a lawyer who previously lived in Washington, said of Trump’s leadership. “He’s an embarrassi­ng role model.”

In one of the nation’s most consequent­ial swing states, Trump’s push to inject new dynamics into the final weeks of the 2020 election is being overshadow­ed by the frightenin­g realities of everyday life during a pandemic. Trump and his allies hope the escalating Supreme Court nomination fight will help unify a fractured Republican Party that has lost its grip on college-educated suburban voters, particular­ly white women.

But for many, the coronaviru­s and the related economic challenges are much more pressing issues.

Trump’s challenge is acute here in North Carolina, a state that his senior aides describe as a “mustwin.“A loss in the state, which Democrats have carried only once at the presidenti­al level in the last 30 years, would make Trump’s path to a second term incredibly difficult and signal dire challenges elsewhere on the electoral map.

Public polling, backed by private discussion­s with strategist­s from both Trump’s and Democrat Joe Biden’s campaigns, indicate that North Carolina remains a true tossup five weeks before Election Day. And lest there be any doubt about Trump’s concerns about his standing here, he has traveled to North Carolina every week for the last five weeks, second only to Pennsylvan­ia.

Trump’s standing will also help decide races for governor and senator, a set of competitiv­e contests that has drawn more political advertisin­g dollars to North Carolina than any other state in the nation. More than $246 million has been spent or reserved to communicat­e with North Carolina voters online and on television about the presidenti­al and Senate contests so far, according to the media tracking firm KantarCMAG. Florida follows with $236 million and then Arizona with $223 million.

Trump has also dispatched Vice President

Mike Pence to North Carolina twice over the last five weeks in addition to four visits by Trump’s children.

The president’s daughterin-law, Lara Trump, a North Carolina native, led a Women for Trump event in the rural eastern part of the state last week to help energize the president’s base. She was scheduled to visit again on Monday.

“This is a must-win state for whoever is to become the next president,“Lara Trump said in an interview.

She said the Supreme Court debate might help motivate each side’s base, including some “fence sitters” who may not have voted at all. But she pointed to a more serious concern for suburban women.

“As far as suburban women are concerned, they want safety and security. They’ve seen what has happened to so many of our Democrat-run cities across America,“Lara Trump said. “It is absolutely frightenin­g to see the chaos, the destructio­n, the violence.”

After her comments, she led an event for roughly 200 people in which the pandemic was not mentioned at all on stage or by several voters who asked questions. The Supreme Court came up only once. The conversati­on was far more focused on the prospect of voter fraud, an issue President Trump has raised repeatedly as polls show him trailing, though experts report there is no significan­t evidence of such fraud.

As in other swing states, Democrats’ closing message has been focused on health care, especially the Trump administra­tion’s ongoing court fight to overturn former President Barack Obama’s health care law and the protection­s for those with preexistin­g conditions that are part of it.

Biden’s team has largely relied on advertisin­g to communicat­e its message, however, because the candidate himself has not been a regular presence in North Carolina — or anywhere — during the pandemic. Biden made his first trip as the Democratic nominee to the state last week. His running mate, Kamala Harris, is scheduled to make her first appearance on Monday at a Raleigh event focused on health care.

“He needs to pick up his game some,” said former North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt, a Biden ally, calling on Biden’s campaign to intensify in-person canvassing. Hunt said the election is “as tight as a tick.”

North Carolina is a glaring example of the deepening divisions that have defined U.S. politics in the Trump era.

Obama in 2008 was the only Democrat to carry the state after 1976, but it continues to trend a bluer shade of purple thanks to an influx of college-educated Northern transplant­s who have packed into North Carolina’s urban and suburban areas, especially around Charlotte and Raleigh. Those booming regions are voting more and more Democratic while the state’s more rural areas are voting more and more Republican.

It is truly a case of two North Carolinas in which voters are focused on completely different sets of issues, said Morgan Jackson, a leading Democratic strategist who is working on the state’s gubernator­ial and Senate races.

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