Arab Times

Will voters want president who feels their pain?

Empathy has often been intangible in presidenti­al politics

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WASHINGTON, April 13, (AP): In 1992, Americans ousted an incumbent president in the middle of an economic downturn because his challenger, Bill Clinton, seemed to better feel their pain.

Twenty years later, when the nation was still climbing out of another recession, voters stuck with President Barack Obama rather than siding with challenger Mitt Romney, who was caught on tape dismissing half the population as people who “believe they are the victims.”

Voters may again be seeking solace, as well as solutions, in this year’s presidenti­al race, one still being reshaped by the unpreceden­ted public health and economic turmoil of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

And if empathy is the question, the contrast is stark and the challenge for President Donald Trump may be steep. Though he has a visceral bond with his most loyal supporters, he’s far more likely to use grievance or even biting humor to make his case.

His presumptiv­e Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, meanwhile, is a politician defined by personal grief and loss, who has long had an ability to use his own family tragedies to connect with voters.

“Biden owns the empathy marketplac­e,” said Douglas Brinkley, a presidenti­al historian. “But that’s just one quality. Sometimes bluster and a cando attitude also matters.”

Early polling in the general election face-off between Trump and Biden bears out a gap between the two contenders when it comes to who Americans see as more compassion­ate to their concerns.

In March, 43% of registered voters said Trump “cares about average Americans,” according to a Quinnipiac poll. Nearly 60% said Biden cares about average Americans, including 29% of registered Republican voters.

Supporter

“I think voters have recognized these traits in him all along, and will continue to because that’s who he is and has always been,” said Jack Markell, the former governor of Delaware and a Biden supporter.

Empathy has often been an intangible in presidenti­al politics, helping some contenders overcome glaring weaknesses and sinking others who fail to display a genuine human connection with voters dealing with economic pain and other hardships.

Biden witnessed that firsthand as Obama’s vice president during their 2012 reelection campaign. At the time, the economic recovery from the 2008 recession was sluggish at best and the unemployme­nt rate still hovered around 8%.

Yet polls showed voters overwhelmi­ngly saw Obama as more empathetic to their economic struggles - particular­ly after Romney, a millionair­e businessma­n, told wealthy donors that 47% of Americans viewed themselves as victims and thought they were entitled to government aid.

Biden arguably has more of a common touch than Obama, who may have bested Romney on empathy but was still often seen as cerebral and professori­al. Biden is the opposite: a tactile, emotional politician whose own searing personal losses have played out in the public eye over decades.

Just weeks after he was first elected to the Senate in 1972, Biden’s wife and infant daughter were killed in a car accident. In 2015, while he was serving as vice president, his son Beau succumbed to brain cancer.

Though Biden can stumble through scripted campaign settings, he’s often at his best after events, when he wades into the crowd to greet voters one-onone. It’s not uncommon to find voters who have come to share with Biden their own personal story of loss - nor is it uncommon for Biden to hand out his personal cell phone number, particular­ly to those whose lives have been touched by cancer.

He nearly revealed his phone number during a nationally televised town hall last month where he took questions from Americans fearful about the growing pandemic and worried about the economic fallout.

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