Los Angeles Times

Trump falls back on 2016’ s ‘ Lock her up!’

Hoping for a similar upset, he’s still riling up base over Clinton.

- By Noah Bierman Times staff writer Eli Stokols contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s campaign appears in chaos and has canceled TV ads in key states because it’s so short on cash. He’s sinking in polls and many Republican­s fear he will take the Senate and state offices down with him on election day.

But Trump faced similar problems a month before the 2016 election and pulled off an upset victory for the ages.

That partly explains why Trump relives that triumph — often with minute- byminute embellishm­ents of that election night — at nearly every campaign event as this year’s race enters the final stretch.

Sure, he denounces the Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden. But it’s often almost an afterthoug­ht as he veers into another rant against his 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton, her emails or former President Obama.

Supporters chant, “Lock her up!” in response, with an occasional twist: “Lock him up!”

“Four years they’ve been trying to get us out,” Trump said Monday night in Sanford, Fla., at his f irst rally since he was rushed to the hospital on Oct. 2 for COVID- 19. “But we’ll take care of it all after the election. We caught ’ em cold. ... Crooked Hillary.”

“And by the way, Obama and Biden knew everything that was happening, just in case you had any questions,” he added, before promising again to “take care of it after the election.”

Trump never says why he hasn’t had Obama and Clinton prosecuted over the last four years, but neither is under any criminal investigat­ion.

Trump is so committed to his 2016 playbook that he never put it aside after taking office.

He has mocked, insulted and condemned Clinton in tweets or comments 1,249 times, on 533 days, or nearly 40% of his time in the White House so far, according to an analysis for The Times by FactSquare­d.

Trump’s advisors have said his attacks on Clinton, and his broader desire to rerun the last election, are borne more of instinct and anger than political strategy.

They also give Trump room, however, to avoid discussing the pandemic that has killed over 215,000 people in the United States — more deaths than in any other country — and the economic havoc that it has caused.

Fealty to the old playbook is prompting Trump to dismiss bad polls as fake, to mock Biden for refusing to hold large rallies despite the obvious health risks, and to seek investigat­ions that could shake up the race, as they did four years ago. He’s hoping that the promise of a new Supreme Court justice will rally conservati­ves as it did last time.

In speeches and tweets, Trump still touts what he calls his achievemen­ts on trade and immigratio­n, his top issues in 2016. But they no longer inspire the same enthusiasm among his followers.

While confined to the White House after his re

lease from the hospital last week, Trump showed his frustratio­n at the state of the race by lashing out at two of his most loyal aides for their supposedly lax attitudes toward Clinton.

He tweeted that he was “not happy” with Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo for not releasing thousands of emails that Clinton had called “personal and private” and had deleted from a private server.

Pompeo later said he would release some of the emails before the election, but it’s not clear what will emerge. A State Department investigat­ion last year found no “persuasive evidence” of mishandlin­g of classified informatio­n, and the FBI twice concluded that Clinton should not face criminal charges.

Trump also demanded that Atty. Gen. William Barr bring charges against Obama and Biden for a hodgepodge of unproven conspiracy theories.

John Ratcliffe, director of national intelligen­ce, has declassifi­ed documents to further Trump’s unfounded allegation­s that Clinton secretly pulled the strings of the FBI investigat­ion that determined Trump’s 2016 campaign had eagerly capitalize­d on Moscow’s efforts.

“Unless Bill Barr indicts these people for crimes — the greatest political crime in the history of our country — then we’ll get little satisfacti­on, unless I win,” Trump said last week.

Former CIA Director John Brennan has accused Ratcliffe of selectivel­y declassify­ing documents in an openly political move to help Trump.

“John Ratcliffe is anything but an intelligen­ce profession­al. It is appalling, his selective declassifi­cation of informatio­n. It is designed to advance the political interests of Donald Trump

and Republican­s who are aligned with him,” Brennan told CNN.

While many Americans are alarmed by Trump’s behavior, there is little evidence that it is helping his campaign.

Three weeks from election day, Biden is leading by an average of 10 percentage points in national polls — about 3 points more than Clinton did at this point four years ago.

Biden is also above 50% in many battlegrou­nd states and has withstood many negative attacks of the sort that battered Clinton’s image.

Trump and his allies repeatedly cite his 2016 victory to argue that polls undercount Trump supporters — believing them too shy to speak with pollsters yet bold enough to wave Trump f lags in large boat parades.

“You know, everything I hear, we’re winning by a lot. Then you turn on the fake news, they say the polls are tied in Florida,” Trump said at his Sanford rally. “I don’t get it. ... Remember four years ago we had the same thing?”

Despite concerns about Trump’s health and the risks of large gatherings during the pandemic, he has resumed an aggressive travel schedule after nearly two weeks of being grounded by COVID- 19.

“He’s our best asset, and it’s going to be a big shot in the arm to the campaign,” Bill Stepien, Trump’s campaign manager, told reporters.

Corey Lewandowsk­i, an advisor, described seeing vast enthusiasm for Trump in battlegrou­nd states, where polls tend to be tighter than the national average.

“It should give you an indication of what’s transpirin­g out there, the grassroots activities,” said

Lewandowsk­i, who was fired as Trump’s campaign manager in 2016.

He predicted Trump’s enthusiast­ic crowds, coupled with support from law enforcemen­t and a marginal increase in support from Black voters, would make it “mathematic­ally almost impossible for Joe Biden to win this campaign.”

Democrats and most outside polling specialist­s use a different math, one that shows Biden with far more pathways to reach 270 electoral votes, and the White House, than Trump has.

The president’s travel schedule ref lects that. On Friday, he will campaign in Georgia, a state that last voted for a Democratic president in 1992 but that now appears a potential Democratic pickup.

“In 2016, he fit the mood of America, which was one of discontent and uncertaint­y. In 2020, it’s a year where voters are trying to f ind their balance and get things back on even keel,” said Peter Hart, a Democratic pollster. “He is a chaos president at a time when we need a stability president.”

In 2016, Trump benefited from hacked Democratic documents released by Russia in October, and then- FBI Director James B. Comey’s letter later that month announcing further investigat­ion into Clinton’s private email server.

At times, Trump has shown frustratio­n that things are not lining up that way again.

This week, he complained on Twitter that Fox News, his top media ally, was running too many advertisem­ents attacking him.

“Not like the old days,” he lamented.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, pictured at an airport rally Tuesday in Johnstown, Pa., details his 2016 win at nearly every event as the 2020 race enters the f inal stretch.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP, pictured at an airport rally Tuesday in Johnstown, Pa., details his 2016 win at nearly every event as the 2020 race enters the f inal stretch.

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