The Oklahoman

Trump pitches `back to normal' as Biden warns of tough days

- By Zeke Miller, Alexandra Jaffe and Kevin Freking

WATERFORD TOWNSHIP, Mich. — President Donald Trump dangled a promise to get a weary, f earful nation “back to normal” on Friday as he looked to campaign past the political damage of the devastatin­g pandemic. It was a tantalizin­gly rosy pitch in sharp contrast to Democratic rival Joe Biden, who pledged to level with America about tough days still ahead after Tuesday's election.

In a campaign that has been dominated by the COVID-19 pandemic that has killed more than 227,000 Americans and staggered the economy, the candidates' clashing overtures stood as a reflection of their leadership styles and policy prescripti­ons for a suffering U.S.A.

Trump and Bid en both spent Friday crisscross­ing the Midwest, the hardest-hit part of the nation in the latest surge of virus cases. Trump was in Michigan and Biden in Iowa before they both held events in Wisconsin and Minnesota.

With four days until the election and more than 83 million votes already cast, time is running out for Trump and Biden to change the contours of a race framed largely around the incumbent's handling of the pandemic. Biden is leading most national polls and has a narrow advantage in many of the critical battlegrou­nds that could decide the race.

Trump, billing himself as an optimist, says the nation has “turned the corner” from

the outbreak that still kills about 1,000 Americans each day. He speaks hopefully of coming treatments and potential vaccines that have yet to receive approval. Biden dismisses Trump's talk as a siren song that can only prolong the virus, and pledges a nationwide focus on reinstitut­ing measures meant to slow the spread of the disease.

“He said a long dark winter,” Trump scoffed Friday at a rally in Michigan. “Oh that's great, that's wonderful. Just what our country needs is along dark winter and a leader who talks about it.”

Trump's rallies, which draw thousands of supporters, have served as representa­tions of

t he sort of “reopening” he has been preaching. With s potty use of masks and a lack of social distancing, they flout state and local guidelines that he deems too onerous as he speaks as though the virus has largely disappeare­d. Trump and his aides speak openly about catering to the support of those “fed up” by state restrictio­ns, and he has encouraged ch ants among his supporters calling for the imprisonme­nt of local officials who have instituted them.

Bid en, for his part, referenced Trump' s comments last summer that the virus “is what it is.” He told supporters in Des Moines, Iowa, that “it is what it is because he is who he

is! These guys are something else, man.”

Trump's closing appeal to “Make America Great Again, Again” paints a halcyon image of the nation `s condition during pre-coronaviru­s times that contrasts with Biden's charge to “Build Back Better.” The president's focus on returning the nation's economy to the boom times of 2019 resonates with some voters, but overlooks the divided and rancorous politics that swirled around impeachmen­t and the persistent problems of inequality.

As the nation set new records for confirmed cases, Wall Street closed out a punishing week Friday with the S& P 500 posting its first back-to-back monthly loss since the pandemic first gripped the economy in March.

Friday marked the beginning of the critical final stretch before the election. Trump's closing sprint includes four stops in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday and nearly a dozen events in the final 48 hours across states he carried in 2016.

Biden, after visiting Iowa, Wisconsin a nd Minnesota on Friday, will hit Michigan on Saturday, where he' ll hold a joint rally with former President Barack Obama.

Bid en will closeout his campaign Monday in a familiar battlegrou­nd: Pennsylvan­ia, the state where he was born and the one he' s visited more than any other in his campaign. The Bid en team announced the candidate, his wife Jill, running mate Sen. Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, plan to “fan out across all four corners of the state.”

After stopping in Green Bay on Friday, Trump will be back in Wisconsin on Monday for a visit to Kenosha. He appears to lag in recent polling behind his 2016 numbers in the GOP-leaning suburbs around Milwaukee, a key area for successful Republican campaigns in the state.

A new Marquette University Law School poll shows Trump with support from 52 percent of likely voters in the eight counties that form the half- ring around Milwaukee. In 2016, he received a combined 61 percent of the vote in the eight counties when he won the state by fewer than 25,000 votes.

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a rally Friday at the Iowa State Fairground­s in Des Moines, Iowa. [ANDREW HARNIK/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a rally Friday at the Iowa State Fairground­s in Des Moines, Iowa. [ANDREW HARNIK/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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