Los Angeles Times

Biden makes a play for GOP states

He evokes FDR in Warm Springs, Ga., now Trump country, as president hustles in Upper Midwest.

- By Janet Hook, Jenny Jarvie and Eli Stokols

WARM SPRINGS, Ga. — With just one week until election day, Joe Biden is playing offense and President Trump is on the defensive, scrambling to replicate his 2016 come- from- behind victory.

Biden has begun making forays into Republican- leaning states that few expected to be within reach for Democrats, while Trump is campaignin­g in territory in the Upper Midwest where he won four years ago but now trails, according to multiple polls.

The Democratic nominee campaigned Tuesday in GOP- friendly Georgia to evoke the spirit of Franklin D. Roosevelt, making a trip that showcased his confidence in the election outcome and the ambitions of his governing agenda.

Trump stumped in Michigan and Wisconsin, attacking Biden as “corrupt” and vilifying a series of prominent Democrats while

boasting of his recovery from COVID- 19 and downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of the pandemic, which has been rapidly worsening in recent weeks across the upper Midwest.

Biden, speaking in the tiny town of about 400 where Roosevelt built a retreat to ease his paralyzed legs in warm mineral waters, offered his closing argument that he would be able to heal the wounds opened by the Trump presidency.

“Our politics for too long have been mean and bitter and divisive — you can hear it now in the distance,” Biden said, referring to the sound of pro- Trump protesters who gathered near the venue.

“This place, Warm Springs, is a reminder that, though broken, each of us can be healed. That as a people and a country, we can overcome this devastatin­g virus.… And yes, we can restore our soul and save our country.”

At a drive- in rally later in Atlanta, Biden marveled at the changed political dynamics in Georgia, which hasn’t voted for a Democratic president in more than 25 years.

“You know, there aren’t a lot of pundits who would have guessed four years ago that the Democratic candidate for president 2020 would be campaignin­g in Georgia,” he said. “Something ’s happening here in Georgia and across America. We win Georgia, we win everything.”

The candidates’ dueling appearance­s underscore­d how they are pursuing mirror- image strategies in the final week.

While Biden has maintained a light campaign schedule in recent days, Trump was scheduled to plow through three rallies Tuesday in Michigan, Wisconsin and Nebraska. In Omaha, he is seeking a single electoral college vote he won in 2016 but that Biden is trying to f lip. In Nebraska, some electoral college votes are allocated by congressio­nal district.

The former vice president is campaignin­g with a message of bipartisan­ship and unity in states that Hillary Clinton lost in 2016. Trump is barnstormi­ng on his own 2016 turf, focusing on f iring up his political base while making few gestures that might bring undecided voters to his side.

In Wisconsin, a state Trump has tried to court with a “law and order” message following unrest in Kenosha earlier this year, the president claimed Biden was a Trojan horse for his party’s left wing.

“If Biden wins, the f lagburning radicals of the streets will be running your government,” he declared.

Referring to protests in Philadelph­ia after Monday’s police shooting of a Black man, Trump claimed without evidence that violence was caused by “some Bidensuppo­rting rioters.”

Earlier, at a rainy rally in Lansing, Mich, Trump drew chants of “Lock her up” when he took jabs at Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, whose efforts to control the spread of the coronaviru­s have been criticized by the right and made her the target of an alleged kidnapping plot.

He criticized Whitmer for closing businesses to limit the spread of the virus and made a plea for support from women that may backf ire with many, declaring that with his policies aimed at opening the economy, “we’re getting your husbands back to work.”

In recent rallies, Trump has times made several wistful- sounding comments about the disruption­s that have been brought by the pandemic. Another came Tuesday, after he told the Lansing crowd that a vaccine against COVID- 19 was “right around the corner.”

“Normal life will fully resume, and that’s what we want. We want normal life, normal life,” he said. “Take us back seven months ago … that’s all we want.”

Paradoxica­lly, it is a desire for a return to normal that is driving many voters, tired of the drama of the Trump presidency, into the Biden camp, polls indicate.

The candidates’ surrogates and supporters are also fanning out for a f inal sprint that reinforced the picture of Trump on the defense and Biden mostly on offense.

Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday was in North Carolina, a Trump state in 2016 that Republican­s have lost only once in presidenti­al elections since 1976. Biden’s running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, is due to campaign in another bigreach state, Texas, on Friday. But on Tuesday she campaigned in Nevada — one of the few states Democrats won in 2016 that Trump has a shot at f lipping.

Lending a hand to Biden’s effort to expand the political map, aides to former New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, the billionair­e businessma­n and former 2020 presidenti­al rival, said he was increasing his campaign ad buy in Florida and putting $ 15 million into Texas and Ohio.

Trump’s cash- strapped campaign, meanwhile, has pulled back its spending in some states, including Florida, where it has reduced advertisin­g by $ 1.2 million, according to the tracking f irm Advertisin­g Analytics. Trump has also cut spending in Iowa and Nevada, while increasing it in Michigan, Wisconsin and several other states. Overall, he’s being heavily outspent by Biden in most of the nation’s political battlegrou­nds.

Biden’s travel to Georgia and Iowa, where he is scheduled to appear this week, could boost the Democrats’ candidates in closely contested Senate races. In Atlanta, he began his rally with a pitch to voters about the importance of their state in the party’s f ight to win a Senate majority. The state’s two senators — Republican­s David Perdue and Kelly Loeff ler — are facing tough reelection challenges.

“I can’t tell you how important it is that we f lip the United States Senate,” Biden said. “There’s no state more consequent­ial than Georgia.”

Some Democrats worry about Biden’s relatively light schedule. And for some, the trips to Georgia and Iowa provoked anxious recollecti­ons of 2016, when Clinton made visits late in the campaign to Republican- leaning states like Arizona and Ohio while apparently taking for granted Democratic- leaning states like Wisconsin, which Trump then won.

A Democrat has not won a presidenti­al race in Georgia since Bill Clinton defeated George H. W. Bush by less than one 1 percentage point in 1992.

But Georgia has become gradually more competitiv­e in the last decade. Since 2016, the state has added more than 1 million voters — many younger and more diverse — to the rolls. In the 2018 race for governor, Republican Gov. Brian Kemp beat Democrat Stacey Abrams by just 1.4%.

Biden and other Democrats are benefiting from eroding support for the GOP in the suburbs, said Bob Trammell, the Democratic leader in the Georgia House, who attended the Biden event.

“A lot of that is in response to Trump himself, and a lot of it is in response to the fact that Republican­s are simply out of step with where the electorate is on a whole range of issues,” he said.

Biden’s reception in Georgia was not entirely warm. Before his event, Republican leaders, including Kemp, held a counter- rally to show support for the president.

Trump signs dotted the Roosevelt Highway that leads to the remote Georgia spa town about 60 miles southwest of Atlanta, and motorbikes and pickup trucks roared across town decked out with Trump banners and American f lags.

“They’re in the wrong county promoting socialism,” said Joe Stadnik, 62, a truck driver who lives in the nearby town of Hamilton, as he leaned against a pickup truck on the highway outside the resort wearing a Trump 2020 baseball hat. “They’re in the wrong state.”

There were no big crowds of Democrats welcoming Biden, as the campaign has kept its events small and socially distanced because of the pandemic. But a few locals stood outside in the hope of catching a glimpse of the former vice president.

“It means so much that he cares about the little people,” said Jacquelyn Walton, a 55- year- old educator who lives nearby. “He has a good chance of winning Georgia.”

 ?? JOE BIDEN Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? campaigns in Atlanta on Tuesday. Georgia has not picked a Democrat for president since 1992.
JOE BIDEN Andrew Harnik Associated Press campaigns in Atlanta on Tuesday. Georgia has not picked a Democrat for president since 1992.

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