The Telegram (St. John's)

‘It’s not about you’

Democrats bet Trump’s coronaviru­s response a 2020 winner for Biden

- TREVOR HUNNICUTT

Joe Biden’s U.S. presidenti­al campaign and his Democratic Party allies have gone on an all-out offensive against President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s response, betting it will be a winning issue with American voters in November.

Just weeks ago, Democrats were treading carefully as Trump commanded the spotlight with his daily briefings on the virus, hesitant to avoid looking too partisan as the pandemic took its toll on jobs and health.

Now Democrats believe weeks of Trump’s unfiltered media performanc­es have done more harm than good for the Republican president seeking re-election on Nov. 3, and their aggressive response aims to expose what they see as his faulty handling of the crisis.

Biden’s campaign team talking points accuse Trump of “one of the worst policy mistakes any president has made in our history.” New campaign ads in battlegrou­nd states say Trump failed to act on the coronaviru­s, which has now infected more than 977,500 Americans and killed more than 55,000, and call him overly trusting of China during the pandemic.

“This has given us an issue that is unifying across all walks of life,” said Bradley Beychok, president of American Bridge 21st Century, a Democratic group funding some of the ads. “Trump’s superpower is distractio­n. You can’t distract from this.”

More registered voters say they would support Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, over Trump, favoring the Democrat 47 per cent to Trump’s 39 per cent in a Reuters/ipsos poll released last week. Biden’s lead has widened even as the coronaviru­s has forced him to isolate himself from the virus in his Delaware home, holding littlenoti­ced briefings.

But voters are more closely split when polled on the health crisis. Reuters/ipsos polling found that 52 per cent of Americans said Biden was better equipped to steer the coronaviru­s response, while 48 per cent favored Trump. Trump, however, had an edge of 53 per cent to Biden’s 47 per cent as the better leader to manage the U.S. economy.

Trump saw only a brief uptick in his overall approval rating early in the crisis, and some of his advisers have been alarmed by his undiscipli­ned televised briefings.

Internal polling by the probiden outside political group Priorities USA showed that, while the country remains deeply divided along partisan lines, there are signs that more people find fault with Trump’s crisis management after earlier seeing his White House briefings as a show of his command of the issue.

“Initially the press conference­s they were doing might have been benefiting the president because the consequenc­es of his actions weren’t clear and present,” said Guy Cecil, chairman of Priorities. “Fast forward a month later, and you’re now past 50,000 dead.”

MORE FORCEFUL TACTICS

Biden’s deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfiel­d has urged the more forceful tactics to counter Trump’s message. She sent a memo last week to supporters outlining four Cs to use as points of attack: Trump’s coziness with the Chinese government, cover-up of the crisis, chaos in responding, and corporate favoritism in how stimulus money was distribute­d.

The campaign also ramped up its Facebook and Google ads, spending more than Trump did during the week of April 12-18, according to Acronym, a liberal nonprofit group.

A Biden campaign video released on Friday shows Trump at a recent briefing saying, “nobody wants to take care of me,” while statistics flash about the rising U.S. death toll and unemployme­nt claims surpassing 26 million.

“Mr. President, it’s not about you,” the ad concludes. “It’s about America.”

“We are witnessing one of the worst failures of leadership by a president in our country’s history, and that’s the only thing that will be on voters’ minds this fall,” Biden campaign spokesman TJ Ducklo said of the new approach.

Trump allies recently launched their own videos criticizin­g Biden’s favorable comments about China and touting Trump’s travel restrictio­ns on the country.

“The President is boldly leading the nation in the war against the coronaviru­s while Joe Biden is snipping from the sidelines,” Ken Farnaso, a Trump campaign spokesman, said in an emailed statement. “Biden is attempting to undermine the Administra­tion’s unifying response, instilling fear with his message of uncertaint­y.”

Some Democrats remain worried about criticizin­g a sitting president in a time of crisis. They see an advantage in Biden maintainin­g a statesman’s role while his supporters go in for the kill.

 ?? KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS ?? Democratic U.S. presidenti­al candidate and former vice-president Joe Biden speaks during the 11th Democratic candidates debate of the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al campaign, held in CNN’S Washington studios without an audience because of the global coronaviru­s pandemic, on March 15.
KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS Democratic U.S. presidenti­al candidate and former vice-president Joe Biden speaks during the 11th Democratic candidates debate of the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al campaign, held in CNN’S Washington studios without an audience because of the global coronaviru­s pandemic, on March 15.

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