Chattanooga Times Free Press

Has Trump hit bottom? Polls show him trailing

- BY STEVE PEOPLES

MONTCLAIR, N.J. — Presidenti­al politics move fast. What we’re watching heading into a new week on the 2020 campaign:

Days to next set of primaries (West Virginia and Georgia): 1

Days to general election: 148

THE NARRATIVE

President Donald Trump enters the week hoping to rebound from one of the lowest points of his presidency as recent polls show that 8 in 10 Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction and even spiraling out of control. The president got a boost late last week with a better-than-expected jobs report, but he’s struggling to show consistent leadership on the coronaviru­s pandemic, the related economic fallout and nationwide protests against police brutality.

Joe Biden has formally clinched the Democrats’ presidenti­al nomination and begun to venture out beyond his basement home studio, but amid competing national crises that focus attention on actual governance the 2020 election continues to be all about Trump.

THE BIG QUESTIONS

Has Trump hit bottom? Last week’s jobs report was a desperatel­y needed bright spot for the Republican president as a growing set of polls show him trailing Biden less than five months before Election Day. That’s as his former defense secretary — with the backing of Trump’s former chief of staff — warned that Trump was violating the Constituti­on and needlessly dividing Americans. To cap off the week, a Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll reported that 80% of Americans feel the country is spiraling “out of control.”

Republican operatives close to the Trump campaign privately concede the situation is dire but suggest there is an opportunit­y for Trump to convince voters that the nation is moving in the right direction again if the economy rebounds from its current state of Depression-level unemployme­nt. We’ll soon learn if last week’s jobs report was an anomaly or part of a trend as states accelerate the reopening process.

At the same time, Trump has considerab­le hurdles in his way as the debate over police brutality rages and coronaviru­s infections continue.

What will we learn from another set of primaries?

Two states will host low-profile presidenti­al primary elections this week: West Virginia and Georgia. And while Biden and Trump have already secured their places on the November ballot, there will be lessons to learn.

We’re particular­ly interested in how things play out in Georgia, which has emerged as a potential swing state in the Trump era. What will African American turnout look like as protests rage over police brutality? And will the civil unrest and continued coronaviru­s concerns interfere with ballot access or mail voting or will those issues be a catalyst for increased turnout?

Any trends that develop will help shape the narrative — and the campaigns’ strategies — as the 2020 contest moves into the summer and beyond.

Can Trump move white people?

The president has offered warm words to George Floyd at times, but his frequent racially charged rhetoric has overshadow­ed any sense that he’s taking seriously the black community’s concerns about police brutality.

Trump shared a tweet over the weekend with his 82 million followers in which a supporter said Floyd being “held up as a martyr sickens me.” He has repeatedly highlighte­d looting and protest-related violence, even as it subsides, and referred to protesters as “thugs,” while ignoring the protesters’ concerns. And he has resumed attacks against black athletes who support kneeling during the national anthem to protest police brutality.

Trump’s willingnes­s to use race to inflame tensions is a defining characteri­stic of his political brand, which began on a national scale when he questioned President Barack Obama’s birth certificat­e. And it worked in 2016. The question is whether it will work a second time. Before the protests exploded, polls suggested that Biden was eating into Trump’s support among white people.

As new polls are released in the coming days, we’ll be paying close attention to whether Trump’s divisive strategy resonates with white people, particular­ly educated white people who have been turning their backs on Trump’s GOP. Already, we’re seeing anecdotal reports that the police community is siding with Trump.

Does he have a plan for that?

This week marks Biden’s self-imposed deadline to release his economic plan on housing, education and access to capital. The former vice president has a history of missing his own deadlines, so new details are far from guaranteed. But the political world is eager to learn more about Biden’s specific governing plans should he defeat Trump in November.

Politicall­y, the specifics may matter most to progressiv­es, who have only reluctantl­y rallied behind Biden’s candidacy.

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