The Manila Times

Trump to suffer landslide loss, group predicts

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NEW YORK: The economy has gone from President Donald Trump’s greatest political asset to perhaps his biggest weakness.

Unemployme­nt is spiking at an unpreceden­ted rate. Consumer spending is vanishing. And gross domestic product (GDP) is collapsing. History shows that dreadful economic trends like these spell doom for sitting presidents seeking reelection.

The coronaviru­s recession will cause Trump to suffer a “historic defeat” in November, a national election model released Wednesday ( Thursday in Manila) by Oxford Economics predicted. The model, which uses unemployme­nt, disposable income and inflation to forecast election results, predicts that Trump will lose in a landslide, capturing just 35 percent of the popular vote.

That’s a sharp reversal from the model’s pre-crisis prediction that Trump would win about 55 percent of the vote. And it would be the worst performanc­e for an incumbent in a century.

“It would take nothing short of an economic miracle for pocketbook­s to favor Trump,” Oxford Economics wrote in the report, adding that the economy will be a “nearly insurmount­able obstacle for Trump come November.”

The model has correctly predicted the popular vote in every election since 1948 other than 1968 and 1976 ( although two candidates lost the popular vote but won the presidency in that span, including George W. Bush in 2000 and Donald Trump in 2016).

The national election model assumes that the economy is still in bad shape this fall, with unemployme­nt above 13 percent, real per capita incomes down nearly 6 percent from a year ago and brief period of falling prices, or deflation.

“The economy would still be in a worse state than at the depth of the Great Depression,” the Oxford Economics report said.

A separate state- based election model run by Oxford Economics that incorporat­es local economic trends and gasoline prices predicts Trump will badly lose the electoral college by a margin of 328 to 210. That model forecasts that seven battlegrou­nd states will flip to Democrats: Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio,

Missouri and North Carolina.

“We would expect these states to experience significan­t economic contractio­ns and traumatic job losses that would likely swing pocketbook vote,” the report said.

Oxford Economics developed the state-based model last year. It would have correctly predicted Trump’s upset electoral college victory, as well as seven of the nine prior elections since 1980.

Is it too early to predict the election? Still, models based on economic trends are not political crystal balls. And they have no track record of predicting elections during pandemics.

“Traditiona­l models work in normal times. But we’re not in normal times right now,” said Greg Valliere, chief US policy strategist at AGF Investment­s.

The election is still six months away. And the past six months show how much the world can change in that period of time. No one was predicting a 20-percent unemployme­nt or a 40-percent collapse in GDP six months ago. Now, those are the consensus projection­s.

In another developmen­t, Biden is currently holding an 11-point lead over Trump in this year’s race for the White House, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released on Wednesday.

Biden leads Trump 50 to 39 percent in a head-to-head matchup in the US presidenti­al election, the poll showed. That’s up from the 49- to 41-percent lead Biden held in April’s poll, but the change is within the margin of error.

Among the registered voters, Democrats go to Biden, 88-5 percent; Republican­s go to Trump, 87-8 percent; and independen­ts go to Biden, 47-36 percent.

“What does the 11-point Biden lead tell us? At best for Team Trump, it says voter confidence in President Trump is shaky. At worst for them, as coronaviru­s cases rise, Trump’s judgement is questioned — and November looms,” Quinnipiac University Polling Analyst Tim Malloy said.

Trump’s job approval rating ticks lower amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, according to the poll.

Forty-two percent of voters approve of the job he is doing, while 53 percent disapprove. That’s compared to a 45- to 51-percent job approval rating he received in April, his highest ever.

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