The Oklahoman

Both candidates' risky strategies

- Michael Barone

Are both presidenti­al candidates trying to lose? Or at least pursuing campaign strategies that put them at grave risk of defeat?

In nearly four years, Donald Trump has made little effort to win over the 50%-plus of voters who didn't support him in 2016. Having proved that he could win the presidency without a plurality of the popular vote, he has ignored the possibilit­y that he could govern more effectivel­y if he were re-elected with an absolute majority.

You can see the results as Trump supporters scan the polling data for encouragin­g informatio­n. They quickly pass over the national polls showing him trailing by 7.7%, according to a RealClearP­olitics average of recent polls. They focus instead on the chart showing him running slightly better against Joe Biden in the battlegrou­nd states than he was against Hillary Clinton two to three weeks out in 2016.

If these numbers prove as much off the mark as in 2016, Trump could win a second term with 270plus electoral votes. But that conclusion requires a lot of assumption­s. Past polling hasn't leaned consistent­ly toward one party, and pollsters tend to compensate — often overcompen­sate — for apparent past mistakes.

Astonishin­gly, Trump has failed to emphasize his two signature 2016 issues: immigratio­n and trade. He can claim that his new trade agreements and economic policies have produced income and wealth gains disproport­ionately favoring low-wage workers — something administra­tions of both parties have failed to achieve for a generation. And he can argue that his immigratio­n policies — and the cooperatio­n he has successful­ly wrested from Mexico — have prevented the surge of unskilled illegal immigrants that could easily resume the minute the networks call the election for Biden.

Biden has a different strategy, with risks of its own. With a solid lead in the polls, and with COVID-19 providing a rationale for laying low, he's running out the clock. On nearly half the days in September, his staffers announced an early “lid.” Sometimes, he would generate no news after 9 a.m. He took three days off this week for debate preparatio­n. He and vice presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris have taken almost no questions from reporters, almost all of whom seem determined not to ask anything that might hurt his chances.

Biden has answered which flavor milkshake he ordered but has refused to say whether he, like many other Democrats, would support packing the Supreme Court. He chewed out the one reporter who asked him about his son Hunter's business deals. Harris, similarly, keeps out of question range.

AObviously, the Biden-Harris ticket is deflecting attention away from the radical policies that Biden has endorsed — and which almost everyone in the press corps favors. After 40 years of opposing government-paid abortions, he now backs them. He's likely to use regulation­s to reduce fracking, which has reduced gas prices and carbon emissions. His tax increases threaten to stymie economic recovery.

There's one problem with this strategy: If something does rock the boat, it could tip it over. A sudden brain freeze or an unanticipa­ted negative story could capsize the campaign. Efforts to help the Biden campaign, such as Twitter's and Facebook's attempts to conceal the New York Post's Hunter Biden story, could boomerang and catch voters' attention.

The fact is that both these septuagena­rian candidates are capable of political selfharm. The most successful presidents of the last 100 years — Franklin Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan — had no really close friends or confidants. Each believed, as Susan Eisenhower writes of her grandfathe­r in her recent book “How Ike Led: The Principles Behind Eisenhower's Biggest Decisions,” “that the task of overcoming any challenge must be a personal matter — a burden to be borne alone.”

Donald Trump and Joe Biden, at least until his basement confinemen­t, have been something like the opposite. They have been willing to share their vagrant and passing thoughts on matters momentous and trivial at great, and sometimes embarrassi­ng, length. The question now is whether Trump can repress that impulse or provoke Biden to indulge it.

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