The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Choice in this presidenti­al election comes down to trust

- Steven Roberts Steven Roberts

The presidenti­al election could be decided by one word: Trust. Who do voters trust to tell them the truth? To keep their families safe? To handle the next crisis?

President Donald Trump’s base remains solid but represents only about 40% of the electorate. Trump is in trouble because he is losing support among three groups outside that base: voters who reluctantl­y backed him in 2016 but have defected; those who chose third-party candidates; and those who sat the race out.

The shift away from Trump is not caused by some groundswel­l of excitement for Joe Biden. But the Democrat presents a stark contrast to the president. He’s calm, where Trump is chaotic; even, where Trump is erratic; decent, where Trump is dangerous. And those difference­s are particular­ly appealing to women voters who back Biden by huge margins: 23% nationally and 28% in the suburbs, according to the ABC/ Washington Post survey.

Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin, who flipped a Republican district outside Detroit two years ago, told the Washington Post: “For my district, there is a real interest in just getting to some stability, some practicali­ty.”

Trust has always been a huge problem for Trump. Exit polls show that 64% of voters did not consider him “honest and trustworth­y” four years ago. Almost 1 in 3 of those doubters voted for him anyway, but over the course of his presidency, their fears about Trump have solidified. The ABC/Post poll reports that about 9% of Republican­s now say they will vote for Biden.

The New York Times surveyed voters in six battlegrou­nd states and concluded, “People who have switched sides since 2016 make up less than 4% of registered voters. But they effectivel­y pack twice the punch of other voters, as they have both deducted a vote from their former preferred candidate and added one to the candidate they now support. Alone, those switches would be enough to give Mr. Biden a fairly comfortabl­e victory.”

Interviews with those switchers help explain their motives. For most of them, it’s all about personalit­y, not policy, and about anxieties, not issues. Elizabeth Hall, a retired lawyer in

Mount Kisco, N.Y., told the BBC that voting for Trump was “the biggest mistake of my life.” The president’s mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s shoved her over the edge: “Every day Trump had a COVID meeting, and every day he was ignoring the facts and pushing them away.”

Shawna Jensen, a Texas high school librarian and lifelong Republican told The Associated Press she is not voting for Trump this year. “I can’t vote for someone who is that ugly to other people … For me, (Biden) is the safest of the two candidates. And he doesn’t make fun of people.”

Gerri Arndt of Davison, Mich., switched from the Democrats to Trump in 2016 and is now switching back. She told NBC: “His temper tantrums, him doing things to get even with people, and not (being) willing to listen to anybody.”

As for Biden, she added, “I think he’ll listen. Trump never listened.”

Voters who sat out 2016 are breaking for Biden by 14 points in the six battlegrou­nd states, the Times reports. One of them is Angelette Moore, a retired Michigan autoworker who thought her vote wasn’t going to matter last time. This time she backs Biden and has already voted by mail.

The Times found that voters who shunned the two main parties in 2016 are now backing Biden by 34 points. Ruth Mierzwa, owner of a small business near Scranton, voted for Libertaria­n Gary Johnson last time. Now, she told the Post, “Trump is just so scary at this point that I don’t think I can waste my vote on a third party.”

If you lose the trust of the voters, you have little left. And that is what’s happening to Trump.

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