Daily Press

Meet the supporters Trump has lost

Many say they expected him to act presidenti­al

- By Claire Cain Miller, Kevin Quealy and Nate Cohn

For some, the disenchant­ment started almost as soon as President Donald Trump took office. For others, his handling of the coronaviru­s and social unrest turned them away. For all of them, it is highly unlikely they will vote for him again.

These voters, who backed Trump in 2016 but say there is “not really any chance” they will this year, represent just 2% of registered voters in the six states most likely to decide the presidency, according to New York Times/Siena College polls. But they help explain why the president faces a significan­t deficit nationwide and in the battlegrou­nd states.

“I think if he weren’t such an appalling human being, he would make a great president, because I think what this country needs is somebody who isn’t a politician,” said Judith Goines, 53, a finance executive at a home building company in Fayettevil­le, North Carolina. “But obviously with the coronaviru­s and the social unrest we’re dealing with, that’s where you need a politician, somebody with a little bit more couth.”

“I’m ashamed to say that I’ve voted for him,” said Goines, who described herself as a staunch Republican.

These 2016 Trump voters might not all be considered part of the president’s base — many were not enthusiast­ic about him four years ago. As 6% of battlegrou­nd-state Trump voters, they are just a sliver of the overall electorate. Also, 2% of battlegrou­nd-state voters who supported Hillary Clinton in 2016 say they will vote for Trump.

But Trump defectors play an outsize role in the president’s challenge. He won by a narrow margin in 2016, and he has made limited efforts to broaden his appeal. Even a modest erosion in his support imperils his reelection chances. Another 6% of Trump voters in these states say they no longer support Trump, while allowing “some chance” that they will vote for him again.

A majority of the defectors disapprove of his performanc­e on every major issue, except the economy, according to the Times/ Siena polls. Somewhat surprising­ly, they are demographi­cally similar to the voters who continue to support him. They are only marginally likelier to be women or white college graduates.

In interviews, many said they initially backed Trump because he was a businessma­n, not a politician. In particular, he was not Clinton.

But they have soured on his handling of the presidency. Several mentioned his divisive style and his firing of officials who disagreed with him, and especially his response to the coronaviru­s and to the unrest in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd in police custody.

Not all of them are ready to back Joe Biden, but they no longer entertain the possibilit­y of backing the president.

Overall, 78% of respondent­s in battlegrou­nd states who said they would not vote for Trump again disapprove­d of his handling of the pandemic.

John Crilly, 55, a retired commercial diver in Reeders, Pennsylvan­ia, said he voted for Trump “because the other option was Hillary Clinton.”

“What changed my mind? 120,000 deaths,” Crilly said. “He refused to realize, ‘Oh my god, there’s a virus coming our way. Shouldn’t we do something, guys?’ COVID was the turning point. It’s the thing that touches home with everybody.” He plans to vote for a local write-in candidate instead of Biden, whom he worries is too old.

The president also lost voters because of his handling of the growing movement against police brutality and entrenched racism. More than 80% of those who will not vote for him again say that Biden would do a better job on race relations or unifying America.

Of the Trump voters who have not ruled out voting for him again, only around 10% said they trusted Biden to do a better job on race relations.

Kelvin Pittman II, 34, who is self-employed doing car detailing in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, said he voted for Trump because “he was a great businessma­n.” As a Black man, he said he aligns with Democrats on many issues, but as a businessma­n, he favors certain Republican policies.

Then came the death of Floyd. Pittman felt the president did not take it seriously.

“It was kind of the last straw. It was like, this dude is just in it for himself. I thought he was supposed to be for the people.”

Cathleen Graham, 53, a nurse who lives in a mostly white suburb of Grand Rapids,

Michigan, has had different life experience­s, but came to the same conclusion. She said she had been shocked to learn how much racism still existed.

“I understand the movement and why it’s going on a lot better than I did than when the gentleman was kneeling at the football game,” she said, referring to Colin Kaepernick. “Even speaking up to support it, I’ve lost friends, friends that were crude, and I was like, ‘How can you even think that of another race?’ ”

Some former Trump voters said it was his personalit­y more than any specific policy that turned them off. They observed his behavior as a candidate, but expected him to act with more decorum in office.

Robert Kaplan, 57, a supervisor at a water utility in Racine, Wisconsin, voted for the president because he wanted to abolish Obamacare, and he did not trust Clinton. But he was disappoint­ed from the start.

“He’s an embarrassm­ent,” he said. “He’s like a little kid with a temper tantrum when he doesn’t get things to go his way. He’s very punitive — if you disagree, he fires you. He disrespect­s very good people in Washington trying to do some good. And I think it’s very disrespect­ful of the office to be tweeting all the time.”

More than 80% of the voters who will not back Trump again agreed with the statement that he does not behave the way a president ought to act. Their view is shared by 75% of registered voters across the battlegrou­nd states.

“He said he was going to, quote unquote, drain the swamp, and all he’s done is splashed around and rolled around in it,” Kaplan said.

Biden was not his first pick, but he believes he has a chance to “bring the people back together.” His choice of vice president is important, he said — he hopes it is someone younger, who can close the divide between the two parties.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP ?? Donald Trump won by a slim margin in 2016; he has made limited efforts to up his appeal.
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP Donald Trump won by a slim margin in 2016; he has made limited efforts to up his appeal.
 ?? LAUREN JUSTICE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Robert Kaplan, of Racine, Wisconsin, who voted for Donald Trump in 2016, now views the president as “an embarrassm­ent.”
LAUREN JUSTICE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Robert Kaplan, of Racine, Wisconsin, who voted for Donald Trump in 2016, now views the president as “an embarrassm­ent.”
 ?? ELAINE CROMIE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Cathleen Graham, of Howard City, Michigan, who once supported Donald Trump, says she plans to vote for Joe Biden.
ELAINE CROMIE/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Cathleen Graham, of Howard City, Michigan, who once supported Donald Trump, says she plans to vote for Joe Biden.
 ?? CHARLOTTE KESL/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kelvin Pittman II voted for Donald Trump because “he was a great businessma­n,” but is no longer in favor of his reelection.
CHARLOTTE KESL/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Kelvin Pittman II voted for Donald Trump because “he was a great businessma­n,” but is no longer in favor of his reelection.

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